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Backronym

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A backronym or bacronym is a type of acronym that begins as an ordinary word, and is later interpreted as an acronym. The word "backronym" is a portmanteau of back and acronym, and was coined in 1983. [link] The term is also used for a new set of words put to an existing acronym (e.g. "advanced research projects agency" → "arpa" → "address routing and parameters area").

An acronym is a word created from the initial letters of a phrase: for example, Random Access Memory becomes RAM, pronounced as the word "ram". Note the distinction between acronyms and initialisms: strictly speaking, one uses the term acronym only when the initials are pronounced as if they compose an actual word, though the term "backronym" is often used less precisely and applied to back-formed initialisms as well as back-formed acronyms.

Details

A backronym is created when one constructs a phrase that has, as its acronym, an existing short word. There are both official and generally serious, as well as unofficial and often humorous, backronyms. When a backronym is peddled as the origin of a word, it is often an example of false etymology; when widely believed, it may have the status of a folk etymology; but more usually it is intended and understood as a joke.

Types

Pure

A pure backronym occurs when a sequence of letters is commonly understood to stand for a phrase that had no role in its original conception. Examples are:-

Replacement

Some backronyms are back-formed by replacing one or more words in an acronym with another, when the original meaning is deemed obsolete, inaccurate, or inappropriate. For example, DVD originally stood for "digital video disc"; when it was noted that DVDs can store any digital data - video or otherwise - the term "digital versatile disc" was substituted. [link] (Because no agreement was reached about the various possibilities, DVD now officially stands for nothing.)

Other examples are:-

Apronym

Other backronyms are back-formed from an existing word that was not previously an acronym. Generally these 'backronyms' are apronyms, as the word used as the 'backronym' is relevant to the expanded phrase it stands for. The relevance may be either serious or ironic. Most apronyms are examples of 'backronyms'. An example of this is the word "acronym" itself which can be A Clever Representation Of Names You Manufacture. Apronyms may be used as a mnemonic device for remembering the underlying word. Many jocular (and often also derogatory) apronyms are created as a form of wordplay. An example of this is the former name for PC Card, PCMCIA: People Cannot Memorize Computer Industry Acronyms (it was originally an initialism for Personal Computer Memory Card International Association), or the numerous backronyms constructed by conservative groups for the ACLU (e.g. Atheists Communists Liberals Unite, Anti-Christian Legislation Union, Anti-Civil Liberties Union). Similarly, the protocol associated with computer scanners, TWAIN, is often explained as representing 'Thing Without An Interesting Name'.

False

There are also false backronyms, in which letters are commonly, but inaccurately, thought to represent a phrase. Examples are:- Concerned activists in the US created backronyms for famous heavy metal bands that attempt to allude at "evil" or satanic content and perhaps that such meaning was originally intended by the musicians. Examples include:-

Recursive

Some 'backronyms' are recursive acronyms like GNU, LAME, PHP and WINE or the pseudo-acronym JINI. Hurd takes this one step further and has two mutually recursive acronyms.

Constructed

Other backronyms are constructed so that the expanded name will match a desired acronym. For instance, the USA PATRIOT Act ("Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act") was allegedly constructed to match the desired USA PATRIOT acronym by government staffers in the days following the September 11, 2001, attacks on America, although this has been officially denied.#redirect

Some backronyms exploit the bewildering acronyms in the corporate world. For example:-

Offensive

Some backronyms are intentionally offensive or insulting. For example:

See also

External links

 


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