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{{short description|Slang interjection}}
{{lowercase|title=w00t}}
{{dablink|This article is about the word. For the online retailer, see ]}} {{about|the word||Woot (disambiguation)}}
{{Wiktionary|woot}} {{lowercase}}
{{wiktionary}}
The term "'''w00t'''" (pronounced, and sometimes spelled, "'''woot'''"; ]: {{IPA|}}) is a ] ] used to express happiness, excitement or joy, most often expressed via the ]. The expression has been used in ] posts , multiplayer computer games (especially ]s), the ] and ] ], ], ], and ].


The term '''w00t''' (spelled with double-zero, "00"), or '''woot''',<ref name="Telegraph"/> is a ] ] used to express happiness or excitement, usually used in online conversation. The expression is most popular on forums, ] posts, multiplayer computer games (especially ]s), ] chats, and ], though use in webpages of the ] is by no means uncommon. The ''w00t'' spelling (with double-zero "00") is a ] variant of ''woot''; alternative spellings include ''whoot'', ''wOOt'', ''wh00t'', ''wewt'', ''{{not a typo|wought}}'', etc.
== Origins ==


==Etymology==
w00t is also said to be an abbreviation for "We Owned the Other Team", but this is a ].
See the Wiktionary article '']'' for details of etymology and citations; while origins are never certain, the below is supported by contemporary written references, and is credited by American lexicographer ].<ref name="barrett">“”, ], December 12, 2007</ref>


The term '''woot''' was recalled by a Canadian in the early 2000s to have been used in the 80s and 90s on an RPG BBS as a contraction of "what a hoot".<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6dgTAQAAIAAJ|title=Everquest Companion: The Inside Story|last=Robert|first=Marks-|publisher=McGraw-Hill Osborne|date=2003|isbn=9780072229035|quote=I used it as an abbreviation of 'what a hoot' while we played on a role-playing BBS in the late '80s and '90s," Bradley said.}}</ref>
The current use of w00t on the Internet traces its origins back to a popular culture reference from the early 1990s. In ] two popular songs with similar titles and themes both rose to the top 10 of ] popularity chart for the year. "Whoot, there it is" and "Whoomp, there it is" by rap groups ] and ], respectively. In both the term was used in a phrase describing pleasure at sighting the posterior of a voluptuous woman (which followed in the footsteps of the previous summer's #3 smash hit "Baby Got Back" by ]). The popularity of these songs and the phrase quickly spread to the internet in discussion of the songs and in similar discussion in alt.rap and rec.music.


'''w00t''' (1996) is a leetspeak form of earlier ''whoot'' (1993), which in turn was popularized by the rap song “]” (single released March 22, 1993) by group ]; this is often confused with “]” (single released May 7, 1993) by group ]. Both these songs are in the same year, in the ] genre. The terms ''whoot'' and ''whoomp'' (and the less common form “Whoops, there it is”) are standardizations of earlier oral use of hooting sounds<ref>Barrett, quoting Jay-Ski, who produced “Whoot, There It Is,” in a 1997 interview:<br>
However, the phrases were catching on in a larger context, as in about "whoot" from rec.sport.basketball.pro (nb. the citation of the Chicago Tribune newspaper):
“There were eight versions of that going around. The idea came from the streets, and even though the 95 South one might have been recorded first, it was Tag Team who released it earlier.”</ref> variously rendered as ''whoo'', ''whoof'', ''woo'', ''woof'' (compare standard '']''), notably by studio audience on '']'' (1989–94)<ref>G. Brown, ''Colorado Rocks'' (Pruett Publishing Co., 2004, p. 128), quoting members of Tag Team (Cecil “DC” Glenn and Steve “Roll’n” Gibson); quoted in Barrett:<br>
“People had been saying ‘There it is’ forever. Everybody in Arsenio Hall’s television audience used to the ‘Wooof’ chant. We put that together with the ‘There it is’ dance-floor chant we were hearing at the club.<br>
Gibson recalled that DC said, “Oh, man, we need to do a song called, ‘Whoom, there it is.”<br>
“All I said was, ‘How do you spell it?”</ref> and in the movie '']'' (1990).<ref name="barrett"/> The use by the “dog pound” section of ''The Arsenio Hall Show'' audience was based on a dog’s '']'', from chants used by football fans of the ] in Hall’s home town.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvacres.com/fans_dogpound.htm |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120914155114/http://www.tvacres.com/fans_dogpound.htm |archive-date=September 14, 2012 |title=Fans & Fanatics > The Dogpound (The Arsenio Hall Show) |publisher=] |access-date=September 8, 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://slate.com/culture/2012/06/woof-whoot-whoomp-and-w00t-from-arsenios-dog-pound-to-the-baha-men-and-beyond.html|title=Woot? Woof? Whoot? Whoomp|first=Daniel|last=Lametti|work=Slate|date=June 19, 2012}}</ref>


Many ] exist, but the written record is clear: the term appears widely in popular print use only from 1993, particularly used both in dancehalls and at sporting events, and is credited to the songs.<ref name="barrett"/> The "w00t" form gained popularity on the Internet from 1996, especially in ]s (MMORPGs) like ].
Newsgroups: rec.sport.basketball.pro
Date: 23 Jun 1993 20:54:59 -0500
From: p...@genesis.MCS.COM (Patrick Sugent)
Subject: Re: Crowd chant at Bulls rally?
lore...@rintintin.Colorado.EDU (Eric Lorenzo) writes:
> I taped the Bulls rally today (being from Chicago) and I was trying
>to figure out what the crowd was chanting. I still had trouble when the
>players would start the crowd going also. It sounded like 'Boom! There you
>go.' Was this some sort of rallying cry they had during the Finals? I had
>never heard it until today.
They were saying (or so the paper says) "Whoot! There it is."
I have no idea what this means and I have never heard it in conjunction
with the Bulls. Apparently, it has something to do with a rap song
or some such (implied by the Tribune). This is not exactly my area
of expertise. :-)


===Folk etymologies===
After that there are more appearances of the same phrase in the sports context and increasingly as a standalone phrase in more ] settings. July 11 1993 in rec.games.frp.dnd :
Many folk etymologies and backronyms exist, none supported by the written record: these often credit the term to games that appeared years after ''whoot'' had been popularized (1993) or ''w00t'' has appeared in common Internet usage (1996).


One such incorrect etymology derives w00t as a contraction of a phrase like "wow, loot!", "woo, loot!", "wondrous loot", and "Wonderful Loot", etc. in a MMORPG when a player found large quantities of/or rare valuable items in game, or as an ] for "'''W'''e ] the '''O'''ther '''T'''eam".<ref name="acronyms">{{cite web | url=http://acronyms.thefreedictionary.com/W00T | title=W00T - What does W00T stand for? | access-date=July 19, 2011}}</ref> These games appeared after w00t was already common. Another supposed origin is as an expression used by a cracker (see ]) who has just broken into a computer system, obtaining "root" access: "woot, I have root!".{{Citation needed|date=March 2011}} Some people say it was just a parody on a child with a speech defect trying to say "loot" and saying "woot" instead.
Newsgroups: rec.games.frp.dnd
Date: Sun, 11 Jul 1993 20:47:06 GMT
From: dhe...@mindvox.phantom.com (Double Helix)
Subject: Net.Rogues.Gallery
I think it would be interested to make a Net.Rogues.Gallery. People
could send in some of their most famous/infamous PCs and NPCs. What
does everyone think about it? Does something like this already
exist? I'd be willing to compile the list.
-Dh*
Double Helix & Wistful
dhe...@mindvox.phantom.com - "Whoot, there it is."


Other etymologies relate it to "hoot" or "toot", as in trains in children's books, that went "Woot! Woot!", doing so as a statement of victory, or applauding good news. (Some people{{who|date=September 2017}} today say "Woot! Woot!" while making the hand-gesture of pulling a train's horn cord.{{cn|date=September 2017}}) Alternatively, attempts are made to relate it to the ] word "hoots", which is used in a somewhat similar manner — an exclamation signifying surprise, disbelief, or kindred reaction, though not for positive feelings (delight, joy) as w00t is. This is also along the lines of people's use of "w00t?", replacing "wot?" or "what?" as a response to a happy surprise.
shows a sarcastic take on the phrase in alt.music.alternative, and predates only slightly in the subject-line of this alt.] post on Aug 8, 1993:


==In popular culture==
Newsgroups: alt.cyberpunk
The word was featured on the list of ] for 2007.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.newsweek.com/2007/12/13/w00t-there-it-is.html | title=W00t! There It Is A quirky online gaming term is crowned Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year. A proud day for geeks everywhere. | publisher=The Newsweek | date=December 14, 2007 | access-date=July 19, 2011 | author=Jessica Bennett}}</ref> They said, it "reflects a new direction in the American language led by a generation raised on video games and cell phone text-messaging".<ref>{{cite news|author=Jason Szep |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1155159520071212 |title=w00t crowned word of year by U.S. dictionary |publisher=Reuters |date= December 12, 2007|access-date=2011-07-19}}</ref>
Date: 8 Aug 1993 13:52:11 -0400
From: c...@panix.com (Clay Shirky)
Subject: Whoot, there it is/NYT and the death of c-p
Just finished the NYT article about Idol, which was pretty amusing, but the
sidebar containing a McHistory of c-p is the death knell, containing such
pieces of balanced reporting as calling rtm a cyberterrorist, calling the
internet DARPANet and saying that EFF was founded to "keep the Government off
hackers backs."
My new "Quadratic Rip-Tide Theory of Information Channels" is that when the
volume of misinformation about a given subject is >= the square of the
volume of real information moving in the opposite direction, the real
information is sucked deep into a watery grave. ;-)


Apart from the British digital sales house w00t!media<ref name="w00t!media">{{cite web | url=http://www.thedrum.co.uk/news/2011/07/12/23520-deviantart-hires-w00t-media-to-grow-advertising-in-uk/ | title=DeviantART hires w00t!media to grow advertising in UK | date=July 12, 2011 | access-date=July 19, 2011}}</ref> the expression also made it into a URL-shortener.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://w00t.in/faq.php | title=w00t.IN &#124; F.A.Q | access-date=July 19, 2011}}</ref> ] named their 2008 album ''w00t''.<ref name="album08">{{cite web | url=http://www.acousticmusic.com/fame/p04994.htm | title=A review written for the Folk & Acoustic Music Exchange by Mark S. Tucker | date=September 9, 2008 | access-date=July 19, 2011 | author=Mark S. Tucker}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/w00t/id285363139 | title=review and pieces listing w00t Garaj Mahal | website=] | access-date=July 19, 2011}}</ref>
Further sightings repeat the new geek application of the phrase, with the double-zero "00" form appearing in November of 1994, on rec.skiing.snowboard:


In 2011, "woot" was added to the '']''.<ref name="Telegraph">{{cite web | url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturenews/8708448/Woot-Retweet-and-sexting-enter-the-dictionary.html | title=Woot! Retweet and sexting enter the dictionary | publisher=The Telegraph | date=August 18, 2011 | access-date=August 18, 2011 | author=Matthew Holehouse}}</ref> The word is officially recognized in the dictionary without zeroes, and is instead spelled with two Os.
Newsgroups: rec.skiing.snowboard
Date: Sat, 19 Nov 1994 21:17:00 -0500
From: John Paul Brzustowicz <j...@andrew.cmu.edu>
Subject: Re: Widowmaker CD ROM very soon
Excerpts from netnews.rec.skiing.snowboard: 19-Nov-94 Re: Widowmaker CD
ROM very .. by S...@sukmag.demon.co.uk
> Quick Time 2.0 films, interviews with Brushie, Kelly, Haakonsen ++ So
> check your sources before you slag, ok.
Hey slick, back up there a second....
I have that CD-ROM from Burton too, but I didn't see any interviews...
sure I saw them all riding, they got clips of that, but I never really
saw any interviews. Maybe I missed something...
I talked to some lady at Burton, and she was saying there's all
kinds of neat stuff on the disk, like clicking in different places or
such gets neat things not otherwise seen.....anyone find any of these?
wh00t!!!!
Euler_


== References ==
and then for (removing the 'h') in alt.games.doom a few days later, in a user's name:
{{Spoken Misplaced Pages|W00t.ogg|date=2006-05-14}}
{{reflist}}


{{Internet slang}}
Newsgroups: alt.games.doom
Date: 24 Nov 1994 05:28:38 GMT
From: w...@access4.digex.net (Da W00T )
Subject: multiplayer game door
What does anybody know about multiplayer game doors for BBS's..
I investigated APCi's server MPGS and it requires 2 machines with 2
digiboards... are there any others that people know of? if so please
EMAIL me with a response to this post... I need it ASAP...
thanks..

The link to Doom is interesting, as ] itself appeared in 1993 -- the same year as the popular "whoot" rap songs -- and included a multi-player mode where players could type messages to each other during gameplay. The "w00t" form would have been faster to type, and of course more ].

As the term began to be used in geek settings, it has been proposed that the word gained popularity as a term for "root access." ] often communicated using code words to signify their progress on the machine they were attempting to compromise. The code word for ] to a ] was ''woot'', and because of the difficulty in obtaining root access, ''w00t'' was used in a celebratory manner.{{Fact|date=December 2007}}

"Woot!!" is also a commonly used term in MMORPGs (massive-multiplayer-online-role-plaing-games) or RPGs (role-playing games) in general to shorten the phrase "wow loot" or 'wondrous loot' thus "woot". This term is thus associated with happiness or joy because it denotes the finding of significant wealth, treasure, or items which are desirable.{{Fact|date=December 2007}}

==Alternative Meaning==

The term, woot, was in use in Middle English literature to mean "know". The term can be found in line 849 of ]'s ''The Wife of Bath's Tale'':
"For wel I woot thy pacience is gon.." ("For well I know your patience will be gone"). .

==2007 "Word of the Year"==
"W00t" was among the list of ] for 2007.<ref name="google">{{cite web
| url = http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5imcJd2ELqieBlFxBLhBnP5k4juaAD8TFGLM00
| title = Merriam-Webster's Word of '07: 'W00t'
| publisher = ]
| date = ]
| accessdate = 2007-12-12
}}</ref> According to ]'s president, John Morse, "w00t" was an ideal choice for the Word of the Year because it blends whimsy and new ].

==External Links==
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*

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*

==References==
{{Reflist}}

]
]
]

==See also==
* ]
* ]

{{Spoken Misplaced Pages|w00t.ogg|2006.05.14}}


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Latest revision as of 15:49, 8 August 2024

Slang interjection This article is about the word. For other uses, see Woot (disambiguation).

The term w00t (spelled with double-zero, "00"), or woot, is a slang interjection used to express happiness or excitement, usually used in online conversation. The expression is most popular on forums, Usenet posts, multiplayer computer games (especially first-person shooters), IRC chats, and instant messages, though use in webpages of the World Wide Web is by no means uncommon. The w00t spelling (with double-zero "00") is a leetspeak variant of woot; alternative spellings include whoot, wOOt, wh00t, wewt, wought, etc.

Etymology

See the Wiktionary article w00t for details of etymology and citations; while origins are never certain, the below is supported by contemporary written references, and is credited by American lexicographer Grant Barrett.

The term woot was recalled by a Canadian in the early 2000s to have been used in the 80s and 90s on an RPG BBS as a contraction of "what a hoot".

w00t (1996) is a leetspeak form of earlier whoot (1993), which in turn was popularized by the rap song “Whoot, There It Is” (single released March 22, 1993) by group 95 South; this is often confused with “Whoomp! (There It Is)” (single released May 7, 1993) by group Tag Team. Both these songs are in the same year, in the Miami bass genre. The terms whoot and whoomp (and the less common form “Whoops, there it is”) are standardizations of earlier oral use of hooting sounds variously rendered as whoo, whoof, woo, woof (compare standard woohoo), notably by studio audience on The Arsenio Hall Show (1989–94) and in the movie Pretty Woman (1990). The use by the “dog pound” section of The Arsenio Hall Show audience was based on a dog’s woof, from chants used by football fans of the Cleveland Browns in Hall’s home town.

Many folk etymologies exist, but the written record is clear: the term appears widely in popular print use only from 1993, particularly used both in dancehalls and at sporting events, and is credited to the songs. The "w00t" form gained popularity on the Internet from 1996, especially in massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs) like RuneScape.

Folk etymologies

Many folk etymologies and backronyms exist, none supported by the written record: these often credit the term to games that appeared years after whoot had been popularized (1993) or w00t has appeared in common Internet usage (1996).

One such incorrect etymology derives w00t as a contraction of a phrase like "wow, loot!", "woo, loot!", "wondrous loot", and "Wonderful Loot", etc. in a MMORPG when a player found large quantities of/or rare valuable items in game, or as an acronym for "We Owned the Other Team". These games appeared after w00t was already common. Another supposed origin is as an expression used by a cracker (see security cracking) who has just broken into a computer system, obtaining "root" access: "woot, I have root!". Some people say it was just a parody on a child with a speech defect trying to say "loot" and saying "woot" instead.

Other etymologies relate it to "hoot" or "toot", as in trains in children's books, that went "Woot! Woot!", doing so as a statement of victory, or applauding good news. (Some people today say "Woot! Woot!" while making the hand-gesture of pulling a train's horn cord.) Alternatively, attempts are made to relate it to the Scots word "hoots", which is used in a somewhat similar manner — an exclamation signifying surprise, disbelief, or kindred reaction, though not for positive feelings (delight, joy) as w00t is. This is also along the lines of people's use of "w00t?", replacing "wot?" or "what?" as a response to a happy surprise.

In popular culture

The word was featured on the list of Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year for 2007. They said, it "reflects a new direction in the American language led by a generation raised on video games and cell phone text-messaging".

Apart from the British digital sales house w00t!media the expression also made it into a URL-shortener. Garaj Mahal named their 2008 album w00t.

In 2011, "woot" was added to the Concise Oxford English Dictionary. The word is officially recognized in the dictionary without zeroes, and is instead spelled with two Os.

References

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  1. ^ Matthew Holehouse (August 18, 2011). "Woot! Retweet and sexting enter the dictionary". The Telegraph. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
  2. ^ The Real History and Origin of Woot and w00t”, Grant Barrett, December 12, 2007
  3. Robert, Marks- (2003). Everquest Companion: The Inside Story. McGraw-Hill Osborne. ISBN 9780072229035. I used it as an abbreviation of 'what a hoot' while we played on a role-playing BBS in the late '80s and '90s," Bradley said.
  4. Barrett, quoting Jay-Ski, who produced “Whoot, There It Is,” in a 1997 interview:
    “There were eight versions of that going around. The idea came from the streets, and even though the 95 South one might have been recorded first, it was Tag Team who released it earlier.”
  5. G. Brown, Colorado Rocks (Pruett Publishing Co., 2004, p. 128), quoting members of Tag Team (Cecil “DC” Glenn and Steve “Roll’n” Gibson); quoted in Barrett:
    “People had been saying ‘There it is’ forever. Everybody in Arsenio Hall’s television audience used to the ‘Wooof’ chant. We put that together with the ‘There it is’ dance-floor chant we were hearing at the club.
    Gibson recalled that DC said, “Oh, man, we need to do a song called, ‘Whoom, there it is.”
    “All I said was, ‘How do you spell it?”
  6. "Fans & Fanatics > The Dogpound (The Arsenio Hall Show)". TV Acres. Archived from the original on September 14, 2012. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  7. Lametti, Daniel (June 19, 2012). "Woot? Woof? Whoot? Whoomp". Slate.
  8. "W00T - What does W00T stand for?". Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  9. Jessica Bennett (December 14, 2007). "W00t! There It Is A quirky online gaming term is crowned Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year. A proud day for geeks everywhere". The Newsweek. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  10. Jason Szep (December 12, 2007). "w00t crowned word of year by U.S. dictionary". Reuters. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  11. "DeviantART hires w00t!media to grow advertising in UK". July 12, 2011. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  12. "w00t.IN | F.A.Q". Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  13. Mark S. Tucker (September 9, 2008). "A review written for the Folk & Acoustic Music Exchange by Mark S. Tucker". Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  14. "review and pieces listing w00t Garaj Mahal". iTunes. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
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