“…The linguistic exchanges that are produced in the virtual world exhibit, furthermore, several particular features, usually referred to as e-grammar traits, that, as Baym (2010, p. 63) observes, make up "a mixed modality that combines elements of communication practices embodied in conversation and in writing" 3 . Therefore, it has to be considered a new language, which has been called Netspeak by Crystal (2001, p. 18), the most common distinguishing characteristics of which, widely studied in the literature (Crystal 2001;Baron 2003Baron , 2008Baym 2010;Androutsopoulos 2011;Herring 2012;Balteiro 2012;Thurlow 2012;Vettorel 2014;Yus 2017a), are the following ones 4 : (i) orthographically, it is described as being so full of contractions, abbreviations, acronyms, emoticons and emojis, repeated letters, capital letters with connotative meanings, punctuation marks with extremely creative uses, unconventional spellings and self-corrections that, according to Baron (2008, pp. 45-46), it should be considered the "written version of casual speech"; (ii) its most remarkable morphological and lexical traits are creativity and innovation, since it is packed with a huge number of new words formed by means of different word-formation processes, among which affixation, blending, acronymy, conversion and semantic shifts seem to be the most common ones; and (iii) finally, its syntax, filled with frequent omissions and incomplete clauses, as well as with colloquial constructions, is considered, on the one hand, "telegraphic and fragmented" (Herring 2012, p. 5) and, on the other, informal.…”