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What Does M Mean When Texting

Texting has taken over the world.

In fact, in 2021, mobile users in the United States sent about 2 trillion text messages.

It makes sense—texting is immediate, personal, quick, easy, and widely accessible. (According to Pew Research, 97% of Americans own a cell phone.)

But texting can be confusing, and miscommunication can run rampant if you’re not careful.

Whether validly or not, people sometimes overanalyze even the minute aspects of your texts, such as punctuation marks.

So it’s important to know the nuances of texting and how your communication is coming across to the people you’re trying to reach. (Especially if you’re a business wanting to reach and speak to customers or prospects.)

Plus, you want to be able to make sense of texting nuances when people are trying to communicate with you.

Let’s get into it then!

Some of this may seem obvious to some readers, but for others, it can be hard to keep up with all the different terms, expressions, slang, and lingo.

So here we’ll go over different questions you may have about a few different elements of “text speak,” so you can understand what things actually mean.

When texting, what does “…” mean?

The infamous “…” (otherwise known as an ellipsis).

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Despite being just a few periods on a screen, those 3 simple dots can pack a punch of implied or inferred meaning (sometimes unintentionally).

Generally speaking, when it comes to texting, the ellipsis means something is unfinished, left up in the air, or uncertain.

Consider the nuances of answering a question with “Yes” vs. answering a question with “Yes…”

The 1st (without any punctuation) comes across as a neutral answer to a question. But the 2nd comes across with more of an uncertainty attached to it—like there’s a reluctance or an unfinished thought.

In fact, that’s the word I’d use to sum up how the “…” can come across: unfinished. There’s something incomplete about the thought.

Sometimes this incompleteness is completed in the rest of the message. For example:

In other cases, the incompleteness is just left, well, incomplete.

Now, of course, many of us are not overly analytical when it comes to these kinds of things, so we may not intend any of that. But some of us are, so it’s important to be aware of how you may be coming across.

In general, avoid the “” unless you want to intentionally convey an idea of uncertainty or “unfinished business.”

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