What does “kkkkkkkkkkkkk” (etc) mean? kkkk is a type of internet laugh, there are many types: Haha, Hehe , LOL, LMAO , etc. Even LMFAO like the song. This laugh or giggle is mostly used by brazilians, it's also popular in Korea. It's a spam of k's (kkkkkkkkk) that means the person is laughing, a lot.
Korean – kkk (ㅋㅋㅋ), keukeukeu, hhh (ㅎㅎㅎ)
The Korean consonant ㅋ meaning “k” which has the same sound as the laughing “ha.” When used online, both “hhh” (ㅎㅎㅎ) and “kkk” (ㅋㅋㅋ) represent laughter.
What is the origin of it? In Portuguese the letter "k" is pronounced "kah". A laugh expressed with "kkkkk" can therefore be seen as a hard laugh – although it's used in a wide variety of situations. It also became popular because it's a lazy way of laughing.
Interjection. kkk. (chiefly Brazil, Internet slang) hahaha (laugh) quotations ▼
It is a shorthand way for lusophones to represent a laugh or a chuckle in a text. I guess “LOL” is a fair English translation. It may refer to the Ku Klux Klan.
Christ the Redeemer, Portuguese Cristo Redentor, colossal statue of Jesus Christ at the summit of Mount Corcovado, Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil.
The use of wwww to represent laughing comes from the Japanese wara (笑), “to laugh.” With the rise of text-messaging and the internet in the 1990s–2000s, Japanese users adapted the kanji 笑 to denote laughter, similar to LOL. People eventually found it easier, though, to use the letter w, from the romaji of 笑, wara.
In French it's hahaha, héhéhé, hihihi, hohoho or mdr, which is mort de rire, literally dying of laughter. Spanish is jajaja, as the letter j is pronounced as h, as in jalapeño.
It is pronounced as 하하하 (hahaha), just as you would expect based on its meaning. Therefore, some people may also use 하하하 (hahaha) rather than ㅎㅎㅎ (hhh) when expressing “hahaha.” You can also write it out as 헤헤헤 (hehehe).
kkk – again is not the Ku Klux Klan but a Korean person e-laughing. ㅋㅋㅋ ("kkk") and ㅎㅎㅎ ("hhh") are usually used to indicate e- laughter in Korean. 'ㅋ', is a Korean Jamo consonant representing a "k" sound, and 'ㅎ' represents an "h" sound.
Chinese (Mandarin): 哈哈 or 呵呵
Though laughter is written 笑声 and pronounced xiào shēng, Mandarin also relies on onomatopoeia for laughter: 哈哈, pronounced hā hā, and 呵呵, pronounced he he. Similarly, xixi, 嘻嘻, suggests giggling.
ㅠㅠ/ㅜㅜ (crying eyes). Another emoticon that comes from using the vowel ㅠ or ㅜ. You will need the Korean keyboard for this emoticon, which resembles a pair of horizontal straight lined eyes, closed shut. The vertical lines coming down mimic tears streaming out of the eyes.
PTDR, short for Pété de rire = “LMAO”, “ROFL”, or literally “Bursting from laughter”
volume_up. shy girl. FR. fille timide.
笑 (wara) is the equivalent of 'lol' in Japanese.
The character 笑 means 'laugh', which is a short form of the verb 笑う / わらう 'to laugh'. The character for wara 笑 (also pronounced emi) is sometimes put in brackets like this (笑) which is read as kakko wara.
In Arabic, laughter is written as ههههه (hhhhh or hahahaha), هاهاها (hā hā hā), or even هع هع هع (ha' ha' ha').
If you ever watched at least one anime series, you probably already know this: “hello” in Japanese is Konnichiwa. Rings any bell? It most probably does since Konnichiwa is undeniably the most common Japanese greeting.
Warota (ワロタ) is Japanese inernet slang meaning "lmao", "haha" or "made me laugh".
In her 2018 book What Did Jesus Look Like?, Taylor used archaeological remains, historical texts and ancient Egyptian funerary art to conclude that, like most people in Judea and Egypt around the time, Jesus most likely had brown eyes, dark brown to black hair and olive-brown skin. He may have stood about 5-ft.-5-in.
Was Jesus in fact a common name back when he was alive? Many people shared the name. Christ's given name, commonly Romanized as Yeshua, was quite common in first-century Galilee. (Jesus comes from the transliteration of Yeshua into Greek and then English.)
헐 (heol) means the same as “OMG” or “WTF” in English, and it's used in the same way.