These types of conversations are the basis for building facetoface conversations. For conversations, forum administration is always available to everyone, so messages on the same topic are often generated simultaneously by moderators (Kress, 2003; Simpson, 2005).
Lack of control over these places in crowded chat reveals another language difference. First, there is a lot of chatter and you can. It's not uncommon for an interviewer to talk to 4 or 5 people at the same time. This can lead to confusion and misunderstanding.

To avoid this negative communication, interviewers often use a name (address) transfer process. This is in sharp contrast to oral discourse, in which verbal and verbal indicators are not mentioned, indicating the intended purpose of the sentence (Freiermuth, 2011; Werry, 1996). If you can't find
, try writing in
 chat and your connection speed. Respondents noted the lack of high transfer rates.

Therefore, participating users prefer shorter sentences to longer, more complex ones. In busy chat channels, responses to some messages are expected on time, so the average message length is typically 6 words. Moreover, since the subject is constantly changing and changing, drawing a long curve has no choice but to move away from the original text, which causes inconvenience or confusion due to delay (Herring, 1999; Werry, 1996).
Free internet chat speed also affects language selection. The speed of communication is guided in the "normal" format. Therefore, choosing to use acorns is a productive timesaving strategy. Although some of the most widely used acronyms now come from other forms of electronic communication (especially forums, free online chat), many have begun to gain popularity through online chat rooms. Icons such as LOL (Laughing Out Loud) and BRB (Be Right Back) enter the public domain but have not yet been used in spoken language and written language (it is rare to hear abbreviations such as "LOL" and "BRB" spoken or appear in print) because they do not provide benefits to users.

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Moreover, because of these facetoface comparisons, chat users often ignore the rules of punctuation and structure; they use symbolic gestures to express meaning (such as smiling faces);

they often use small words in their texts (unless their purpose is to show off, when using big words);

they use abbreviations for their names, and texts are often filled with "spelling errors" and other spellings (such as "take" and "that is a")

 

Twitalk

Run tracker, Water reminder

We-talk

Dashlane

Socio