Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
1337 5p34k
French translation:
L@n9aGe l33t
Added to glossary by
Florence Bremond
May 8, 2005 12:53
19 yrs ago
English term
"Leet" or L33t
English to French
Tech/Engineering
Computers (general)
IT
L33t (aka “leet”): A special language developed on the Internet by people who chat a lot or play games.
That is all I have.
Anybody knows the french word for leet?
Thank you
That is all I have.
Anybody knows the french word for leet?
Thank you
Proposed translations
(French)
3 +3 | L@n9aGe l33t | Florence Bremond |
5 +1 | DEFINITION | HammoudLawFirm |
Proposed translations
+3
6 mins
English term (edited):
L33t 5p34K
Selected
L@n9aGe l33t
Je suis tombée sur le même problème pas plus tard qu'hier et j'en suis là de mes conclusions - d'ailleurs si quelqu'un d'autre a une meilleure idée ça m'intéresse aussi :-)
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Note added at 7 mins (2005-05-08 13:00:44 GMT)
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http://www.dicodunet.com/definitions/internet/leet.htm
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Note added at 7 mins (2005-05-08 13:00:44 GMT)
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http://www.dicodunet.com/definitions/internet/leet.htm
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Platary (X)
: Des infos en anglais de chez Microsoft : http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/children/kidtalk.ms... // ('357 4\/3( |°|_4!5!|2 !
54 mins
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/\/\3rci 4dRi3|\|
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agree |
Pierre Renault
: fa k... c bon
1 hr
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agree |
jacrav
: V^/4® 05i http://linuxreviews.org/howtos/l33t/
10 hrs
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J3 (r01$ qµ'1£ v4 ƒ4££01r 4j0µ73r µn3 n0µv3££3 £4n9µ3 $µr Pr02 :-)
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Merci beaucoup."
+1
1 hr
English term (edited):
ENGLISH
DEFINITION
Leet (aka "leet speak", l33t, 1337, etc.) is a written-only dialect of the English language, used on the Internet. Its users are often those who participate in online gaming, crackers, and avid IRC users. It differentiates from its mother tongue, as 'normal' letters are replaced by numbers, bi-case letters, and special characters. Correct capitalization and punctuation are ignored by its users.
Leet (aka "leet speak", l33t, 1337, etc.) is a written-only dialect of the English language, used on the Internet. Its users are often those who participate in online gaming, crackers, and avid IRC users. It differentiates from its mother tongue, as 'normal' letters are replaced by numbers, bi-case letters, and special characters. Correct capitalization and punctuation are ignored by its users.
The term "leet" comes from the term "elite". The leet dialect comes from the days of BBSs, where it was probably developed as a way of defeating obscenity-censoring filters. Some boards had an "elite" section which only trusted members were allowed access to, where warez trading and other such shady activities took place.
True hackers frown on the use of leet, and only use it in a sarcastic way. They are usually able to understand it however, and several leet terms have made there way into the hacker lexicon - see the Jargon File for details.
In keeping with the filter-defeating origin of leet, there is no standard "spelling" or character substitution in leet. Because of this, reading leet is easier than writing it.
In addition to character substitution, there are several words that are unique to leet, or at least have a differing semi-standard spelling. Here are some examples (for readability, no character substitution):
"haxor" for "hacker" (sometime used as if it is pronounced the way it is "spelled", for example "haxor my boxors (boxers)!"
"joo" for "you"
"dood" for "dude"
"noob" for "newb"
"pron" for "porn" or "pornography" - this is standard hacker dialect as well.
Some "standard" character substitutions
A
Leet (aka "leet speak", l33t, 1337, etc.) is a written-only dialect of the English language, used on the Internet. Its users are often those who participate in online gaming, crackers, and avid IRC users. It differentiates from its mother tongue, as 'normal' letters are replaced by numbers, bi-case letters, and special characters. Correct capitalization and punctuation are ignored by its users.
The term "leet" comes from the term "elite". The leet dialect comes from the days of BBSs, where it was probably developed as a way of defeating obscenity-censoring filters. Some boards had an "elite" section which only trusted members were allowed access to, where warez trading and other such shady activities took place.
True hackers frown on the use of leet, and only use it in a sarcastic way. They are usually able to understand it however, and several leet terms have made there way into the hacker lexicon - see the Jargon File for details.
In keeping with the filter-defeating origin of leet, there is no standard "spelling" or character substitution in leet. Because of this, reading leet is easier than writing it.
In addition to character substitution, there are several words that are unique to leet, or at least have a differing semi-standard spelling. Here are some examples (for readability, no character substitution):
"haxor" for "hacker" (sometime used as if it is pronounced the way it is "spelled", for example "haxor my boxors (boxers)!"
"joo" for "you"
"dood" for "dude"
"noob" for "newb"
"pron" for "porn" or "pornography" - this is standard hacker dialect as well.
Some "standard" character substitutions
A
Reference:
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Pierre Renault
: Yeah, and it is todully lame-o. You forgot to mention the multicolour ANSI sig. files.
9 mins
|
Discussion