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In an article in the newspaper tonight about something that is near and dear to my heart, (where did we get that phrase anyway?) it states:

"Western New York's snowmobile trails, most of which are closed after an insurance snafu, are expected to reopen as early as this weekend..."

Now, I knew that at one time snafu stood for s(ituation) n(ormal) a(ll) f(***ed) u(p). But until I looked in my dictionary, I didn't know that it had become a word on its own. "Slang ~~ A chaotic or confused situation.".

Are there other acronyms that have become self-standing words?
 
Posts: 1412 | Location: Buffalo, NY, United StatesReply With QuoteReport This Post
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Plenty!

As Michael Quinion has observed more than once, words created from acroynyms are a relatively recent phenomenon (rare before the 20th Century) but there are still many such.

Radar; Laser; Acorn; Abta; Iata.

"The Times" gives implicit approval to words thus formed when it spells them with upper and lower case. Thus, until a few years ago, ABTA (The Association of British Travel Agents) was shown as an acronym; now it is shown as a word.

Some such words are now so common that people do not realise that they were oroginally acronyms

Richard English
 
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Snafu is only one of a fairly long list of acronyms of this sort, popularized during the WW2 era, but it does seem to be the one which has shown the most staying power. Others include:

Tarfu - Things are really fouled up. (I'll use "fouled" in place of the more commonly used "f***ed.")

Tafumtu - Things are fouled up more than usual.

Fubar - Fouled up beyond all recognition (My favorite! When I was in the service, this one was actually used by maintenance personnel in official documentation until some commander put a stop to it, not out of any sense of propriety but because it was imprecise.)

Janfu - Joint Army-Navy foul-up

There are at least 5 or 6 more but these are the only ones to come to mind at the moment.
 
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After posting this last night, I went to bed thinking about it. (Bob, maybe we can get joint psychiatric help?) Anyway, some of the most common ones would have to be scuba, asap, yuppy, and dink.
 
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SUSFU - Situation Unchanged: Still F*cked Up
FUBB - F*cked Up Beyond Belief
FUMTU - F*cked Up More Than Usual
SAPFU - Surpassing All Previous F*ck-Ups

And a personals favorite:
FUJIGMO - F*ck You, Jack; I Got My Orders

[This message was edited by shufitz on Sat Jan 11th, 2003 at 19:38.]
 
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Didn't Snafu originate in the novel Catch-22? I'm not sure.
 
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quote:
Originally posted by museamuse:
Didn't Snafu originate in the novel _Catch-22_? I'm not sure.


'Fraid not, m. "Snafu" was used in the WW2 era while "Catch-22," a book about that era, was written much later.

Not that you asked but "Catch-22" is my all-time favorite Number One novel of all time and one I reread every four or five years or so. The movie missed the mark but the book is a treasure beyond words.
 
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