What “OK” Stands For

Today I found out what “OK” stands for, namely “oll korrect”.  So how does that make any sense at all?  I’m glad  you asked, because otherwise this article would have been way to short to publish. 😉

The time was 1839.  In Boston and New York, slang abbreviations were all the rage with the abbreviations often representing deliberately misspelled slang phrases like “KY” for “know yuse”; “OW” for “oll wright” (the predecessor of “oll korrect”); “KG” for “know go”; “NS” for “nuff said”;  and many many others.

OK is one of the few of these abbreviations to survive.  It managed to do so largely because of an 1840 New York campaign slogan by boosters of Martin Van Buren for re-election.  Van Buren’s nickname was “Old Kinderhook”; so this group made their name the “O.K. Club”, thus having the double meaning of “oll korrect” and “Old Kinderhook”.  As you might expect, this also gave rise to Van Buren’s opponents quipping that Van Buren’s supporters were all illiterate.

If you liked this article and the Bonus Facts below, you might also enjoy:

Bonus Facts:

  • The phrase “Okey-doke” first showed up in 1932 and originally came about as the English spelled OK “okie”.  This was then brought back to America where Americans pronounced this version with a long e, giving rise to the rhyme.
  • Greek immigrants to America who ended up returning to Greece were called by the Greece “okay-boys”, due to the fact that they had picked up certain American speech mannerisms such as “OK”.
  • The verb form of OK originally showed up in 1919 being spelled out as “okeh”, being confused with the Choctaw word “okeh”, which means “it is so”.  In 1929 however, this spelling was replaced by okay, which has pretty much endured to this day.
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40 comments

  • Vossinakis Andreas

    I know that OK derives from the words “Ola Kala” which means “All is good”, that was used from greek sailors and immigrants to mark all the shipment that was good to go

  • Martin van Buuren used to sign documents with O.K. that’s where it came from.

  • I know that OK derives from the words “Ola Kala” which means “All is good”, that was used from greek sailors and immigrants to mark all the shipment that was good to go

  • i’m from kinderhook!

  • It always used to be said that OK began in the french-speaking part of the Caribbean, and arose from the rum trade.

    Barrels of rum were inspected and any that were substandard were put aside for the use of the locals, but the best ones were chosen for export to France, so they would be sent to the docks, which in french is “au quai” (pronounced “aw kay”)

    Barrels thus selected were marked as such, as being suitable to send “au quai” (=to the docks) and O K was a very convenient abbreviation. (a bit like the way we use the figure 2 to mean “to” or the figure 4 to mean “for”)

  • Factoid doesn’t mean fact btw. Look it up. It means something that is presented as a fact but is in fact not.

  • I’ve heard the Ola Kala version and also that soldiers would send a runner with the news of death toll and when none were killed in battle they wrote 0 Kill that turned to 0K and when there were no kills all was good so tis OK

  • False, false, false. This article is wrong. They are talking about already using OK and giving it meaning. OK originates in revolutionary war. O.K. meant 0 killed.O is basically a zero and it means that all men returned without casulties at the end of the day. SO when someone said how was the day, they said istead of zero killed, they said O.K. and it survived and people used it without knowing what that means so they just guessed what it means and thats what your article is about.

  • I always assumed that OK came from Russian. Oche Kereshaw (very good). It makes so much more sense to me.

  • I always thought it stood for…y’know…okay…>.>

  • Dear I have heard from someone that ok stand for objection killer..

  • ok stand for objection killed

  • I believe Mike is correct in its derivation from the french, but I think it was yelled in the harbors to give the all clear as well, not just barrel designation. The french were saying it before the revolutionary war. there’s gotta be a good reference source for root word entymology somewhere…

  • OW for oll wright? it’s longer to say the abbreviation!

  • I had heard it meant On Keel. The ship is on keel and that means the direction and status of the ship is where it supposed to be. Supposedly hundreds of years old, but I wasn’t there, so who knows…

  • it stands 4 okay…..duh

  • IT STANDS FOR ” OBJECTION KILLED”

  • OK
    Olla Kala originates from Greek sailors and it was understood in all major ports worldwide around the Byzantine times as plenty of scripts reveal, this era dates even before the roman empire times. Someone who studied Byzantine history can verify you this.

  • @Vossinakis Andreas
    Ola Kala (Greek: Όλα Καλά;) means “All Good”. where did you see the “is” in it?

    So let’s see…
    1. Correctly spelled “Όλα Καλά” is a perfect match for OK!
    2. Miss-spelled “oll korrect” again is a perfect match for OK!

    Which one is the most probable origin of “OK”?
    My guess is both, and that this coincidence made “OK”stick!

    @ Dr Graham
    I’ve heard this too, but again I think the coincidence, the fact that it was used and made sense in more than one languages is what made it survive through the years.

  • Ok means Objection Killed first time hitler spoke this word.As my teacher told me.

  • wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong
    it is my resrched that o.k means objection killed
    i.e. there is no more objection for any further talk
    that is ok 😉

  • objection killed stand for ok

  • Can anyone post an image/scan from the newspaper where there is ‘oll korrect’ as deliberate mispelling?

    I found ‘o.k., i.e. all korrect’, but not ‘oll korrect’.

    Thanks

  • James Patterson

    It came from black people in Washington D.C. area in the 80’s describing “old crack”.

  • The article would have been way too******* short 🙂

  • For generations upon generations, Scots dialect for “oh, yes” has been “Och, aye!”.

    It may not be recorded by the etymologists, but that’s my view of where it came from. Everything else is fanciful construction.