“…The net-speak (texism) used by children in chatting often has a different style from standard language. English net-speak is generally abbreviated, using different forms of orthographic or phonological abbreviations (Waldron et al, 2015;Blom et al, 2017;Chen et al, 2020), such as contractions (e.g., msg for message), phonological abbreviations (e.g., thru for through), initialisms (e.g., omg for oh my God), shortenings (e.g., goin for going), single letters (e.g., u for you), combined letters (e.g., 2 day for today), and accent stylizations (e.g., gonna for going to). Plester et al (2009) have pointed out that people experienced in net-speak themselves may have a high level of language sensitivity and ability, which is the reason why they are interested in net-speak words and use them creatively.…”