ACRONYMY
According to the
strictest definition of an acronym, only abbreviations that are pronounced as
words qualify. So by these standards, for example, COBOL
(Common Business Oriented Language) is
an acronym because it's pronounced as a word but WHO (World Health
Organization) is not an acronym because the letters in the abbreviation are
pronounced individually. However, opinions differ on what constitutes an
acronym: Merriam-Webster, for example, says that an acronym is just "a
word formed from the initial letters of a multi-word name."
Frequently, acronyms
are formed that use existing words (and sometimes the acronym is invented first
and the phrase name represented is designed to fit the acronym). Here are some
examples of acronyms that use existing words:
- BASIC
(Beginner's All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code)
- NOW
(National Organization for Women)
- OASIS
(Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards)
Abbreviations that
use the first letter of each word in a phrase are sometimes referred to as
initialisms. Initialisms can be but are not always acronyms. AT&T, BT, CBS,
CNN, IBM, and NBC are initialisms that are not acronyms. Many acronym lists
you'll see are really lists of acronyms and initialisms or just lists of
abbreviations. (Note that abbreviations include shortened words like
"esp." for "especially" as well as shortened phrases.)
Summing up:
- An abbreviation is a shortening of a word or a phrase.
- An acronym is an abbreviation that forms a word.
- An initialism is an abbreviation that uses the first letter of each word in the phrase (thus, some but not all initialisms are acronyms).
Furthermore:
- An acronym so familiar that no one remembers what it stands for is called an anacronym (For example, few people know that COBOL stands for Common Business Oriented Language.)
- An acronym in which one of the letters stands for the actual word abbreviated therein is called a recursive acronym. (For example, VISA is said to stand for VISA International Service Association.)
- An acronym in which the short form was original and words made up to stand for it afterwards is called a backronym. (For example, SOS was originally chosen as a distress signal because it lent itself well to Morse code. Long versions, including Save Our Ship and Save our Souls, came later.)
- An acronym whose letters spell a word meaningful in the context of the term it stands for is called an apronym. (For example, BASIC, which stands for Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code, is a very simple programming language.)
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