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OK, ok, okay. How do you write OK?

3 minute read

pop art style hand makes OK shape over pink collage effect
pop art style hand makes OK shape over pink collage effect

We received the following question from Tim, one of our newsletter readers:

โ€˜Is it okay to write โ€œOKโ€ as โ€œokโ€? Or should the abbreviated form always be in upper case?โ€™

Little did he know the amount of discussion his question would generate in the office, writes Cathy Dann.

The short answer

The simple answer to Timโ€™s question is that the all-lower-case โ€˜okโ€™, while just about acceptable in text messages, isnโ€™t really OK for more formal contexts. The generally accepted form is โ€˜OKโ€™ โ€“ upper case, with no full stops.

But, as there seems to be some appetite for a more complicated answer, hereโ€™s a little further information.

The slightly longer answer

There are several wildly differing theories regarding where OK comes from, from the German โ€˜ohne Korrekturโ€™ to the Ulster Scots โ€˜och ayeโ€™ and even the Wolof โ€˜waw-kayโ€™. But the most widely accepted theory was presented by Allen Walker Read of Columbia University in 1963 and has its roots much closer to home.

 

OK appears

He traced OK back to its first appearance in print, in the Boston Morning Post, in 1839. It featured in a satirical article on bad spelling, as a humorous abbreviation of โ€˜all correctโ€™ โ€“ deliberately misspelled โ€˜orl korrectโ€™.

(… And letโ€™s just pause a moment here to chuckle at ourselves for discussing how we should correctly spell a word that started life as a deliberate misspelling.)

 

Okay … is it?

Some people prefer to write โ€˜okayโ€™, because it looks more like a word and allows them to avoid the jarring appearance of block capitals. In Modern English Usage, HW Fowler writes: โ€˜The alternative form okay is especially useful as a verb (= to say OK to, to authorise), allowing more comfortable inflected forms (okays, okayed, okaying) than OK does.’

However, many insist that the โ€˜okayโ€™ spelling shouldnโ€™t be allowed. This is because when the word first appeared in print, in 1839, it was spelt โ€˜OKโ€™. The spelling โ€˜okayโ€™ developed some time later. A quick look at Googleโ€™s Ngram Viewer suggests that โ€˜OKโ€™ had at least a 100-year head start on โ€˜okayโ€™, but that for most of the past 100 years the two have been neck and neck. Itโ€™s only in the past 25 years or so that โ€˜OKโ€™ has surged decisively back into the lead.

To sum up

And that brings us tidily back to the present day. The most widely accepted spelling is OK, and for a quiet life thatโ€™s definitely the one to go with. But if you want to make a stand for okay, thatโ€™s OK by us.

 

Further reading:

โ€ข ย John McIntyreโ€™s OK by me post in the Baltimore Sun explains the โ€˜orl korrectโ€™ joke in more detail (article may not viewable, depending where you are)
โ€ข ย Stan Careyโ€™s blog post Oke is OK discusses more variant spellings
โ€ข and for the truly dedicated, Allan Metcalfโ€™s book OK: The Improbable Story of Americaโ€™s Greatest Word (Oxford University Press, ยฃ12.99) is apparently a brilliant read.


Okay then. (OK then?) To learn more about better professional writing, download our free 64-page guide to businessย writing, The Write Stuff.

 

Image credit: Accogliente Design / Shutterstock

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Cathy Dann (nee Relf)

Cathy is a certified word and editing expert, having worked as a sub-editor, editor and copywriter at, to name a few, the Guardian, The Sunday Times, The Telegraph, Which? and The Grocer.

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