 Good morning, John. Okay. That's a weird word, by which I mean okay. Okay means like fine, good, satisfactory, approved, none of those words you could have case in them. There aren't any words that are just capital letters. This isn't normal. And yet, okay is possibly the most spoken word on the planet, not because we say it a lot in the US, which we do, but also because we say it a lot everywhere. So many other languages have been like, yeah, actually, that one's good. We'll take that. So from Mandarin to Hebrew to Flemish to Russian to Indian to Portuguese, okay is okay. It's a common affirmative word. What does okay even mean? It's like you want to approve of something, but not a lot. Finally, we have a word for it, good, without all the good tied up in it. Like if I fall down, you say, are you okay? All you're really asking is, is there something wrong? It's like an acceptance without any values or perspective or opinions laid on top of it. And I want that. I can just be okay, and that's okay. Where did it actually come from, though? Allow me to introduce you to the only Wikipedia page that is a list of potential etymologies for a word. And it's very long. Maybe it comes from, oh, I, this, like Scottish, oh yes. Or from the Greek phrase, olacala, meaning all good, maybe. But etymologists and historians have said it on three prime theories. We'll get to the most said upon one last, but let's start with West African origin. That's brought to the US by slaves. A 1784 verified use of the word K, rather than okay, is a transcription of something a slave said in North Carolina. And this may come from a common West African phrase, oki or wa-ke, depending on the language, that's basically an affirmative or a back channel. A back channel is what linguists call that thing that you do where you make a noise or you say a phrase or a word, just to let somebody know that you understood what they said. And among the many uses for the word okay, remains back channel. Like you're on the phone and you're like, okay, uh-huh, yep, mm-hmm, okay, like that. Second, the Choctaw word okay, which maybe was also somewhat similar in other Native American languages, and from what I can tell this is not particularly easy to translate, but probably it means something to the effect of it is so, and is also apparently sometimes used as a back channel, weirdly enough. The definite thing that we do know is when it entered into the popular lexicon of average Americans as the letter O and the letter K, in the late 1830s, there was this weird fad for comically misspelling things in newspapers? I don't know. And then you would take those common misspellings and create acronyms from them. Like, another example of a similar word was o-w, which was for alright. Later, they had oil correct, o-k. Now this, like all of the other weird comical misspelling acronyms, would have been completely forgotten, if not for Martin Van Buren. The Democratic Party decided to like take this weird o-k meme and apply it to Martin Van Buren, whose name sounded too Dutch, I guess. But he was from Kinderhoek, New York, and they called him Old Kinderhoek. But that probably also wouldn't have stuck around if people hadn't been looking for ways to save characters on telegrams because you paid by the letter. And then, o-k, continued to trundle down the decades until we got to where we are now. For me, the amazing thing about this word is how normal and everyday it is, despite the fact that it is very weird and unusual and we never notice that. And it sort of exists in the background as part of the fabric of culture, not as something that we immediately identify as something that we're confused and amazed by. But it is confusing and amazing, and I guess that's o-k. John, I'll see you on Tuesday.