AFAIC - As far as I'm concerned
AFAIK - As far as I know
BFN - Bye for now!
BRB - Be right back, or, Bathroom break
Eg. - Ergo, Latin for "for example"
GFY - Go *profane* yourself
IDK - I don't know
IK - I know
IMHO - In my honest opinion
LMAO - Laughing my *profane* off
NM - Nothing much
NMU - Nothing much, you?
Nosht - No *profane*!
NP - No problem
NTY - No thank you
NuB - noob, newbie
NVM - Never mind
Rlly? - Really?
ROFLOL - Roll on floor laughing out loud
ROFLMAO - Rolling on the floor, laughing my *profane* off!
TTYL - Talk to ya later
TTYN - Talk to ya never
TY - Thank you
W/E - Whatever
Rolling On the Floor, Laughing.
ROFL or ROTFL means "rolling on the floor laughing."
Nonfiction :O
Regular languages are a type of language in formal language theory that can be defined using regular expressions or finite automata. Examples of regular languages include languages that can be described by patterns such as strings of characters that follow a specific rule, like a sequence of letters or numbers. Regular languages are considered the simplest type of language in formal language theory and are often used in computer science for tasks like pattern matching and text processing.
ROFL stand for "Rolling On Floor Laughing". (It was originally ROTFL.) It is an internet slang used to indicate great amusement at something, That you find something outrageously funny, even more than LOL (Laughing Out Loud).You can express yourself in a text message or email by adding "ROFL" at the end to show you are highly amused by something. Have fun with your new catchphrase! ROFL!Sometimes OIHAT will be added to the end of "ROFL", therefore changing it to: Rolling on floor laughing, oops I hit a table. This phrase is used more by the "class clowns" or the people trying to be funny.ROFL simply means Rolling On the Floor Laughing.
Peppa falls on the floor when she is laughing, it is known in text language as ROFL roll on floor laughing.
MUL edition = MULtiple languages edition; Thus, the term indicates that the text concerned has text in multiple languages.
It is probably a misspelling for ROFL or ROFC, which means rolling on the floor laughing or rolling on the floor crying.
The colour of wheat seeds, or skin colour are common examples used in text books.
im not sure what you mean but this might be it: lol laugh out loud ftw for the win wtf what the f*** rofl rolling on floor laughing lmao laughing my a** off hope this helps.
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I think you might mean rofl- this means "rolling on floor laughing". If you meant "rolf" then I've no idea. XxElxX