- TTFN
:"ttfn redirects here. For the book by
Lauren Myracle , see "ttfn.TTFN is aninitialism for a colloquialvalediction : it stands for Ta Ta For Now. " is akin to 'bye bye'. The expression came to prominence in the UK during theSecond World War . "Ta ta" is close in meaning to the French "Au revoir" or the German "Auf Wiedersehen". It is, however, less formal - more like or .TTFN originates from Morse code (and is still used occasionally in ham radio) as an ending to a transmission but was brought into popular use in the UK in
1941 in the weekly radio comedy "ITMA" by the character Mrs. Mopp. From1939 , initialisms, previously rarely used except by the military, were heard more frequently by the British public. "ITMA" satirized them by coining TTFN, a "pointless" initialism (no easier to say than the phrase on which it was based) and using it as a catchphrase.Thirty years later,
Paul Winchell , following the suggestion of his British third wifeFact|date=October 2008, Jean Freeman, improvised the redundant phrase "TTFN, Ta Ta For Now!" as a signature phrase for the (originally British) characterTigger in the Disney films based onA. A. Milne 's book "The House at Pooh Corner ". This, in a world now accustomed to them, popularised worldwide a word originally coined to make fun of initialisms.It was also a phrase used regularly in the later series of the BBC comedy "
Only Fools and Horses " byDel Boy and at least once by Corporal Jones (the butcher) in "Dad's Army ".It has been used in various U.S. television programs including "Batman" and "
The Simpsons ".In episode 40 of "
Goodnight Sweetheart ", Gary's wartime wife "Phoebe Sparrow " says to his present day wife "Yvonne Sparrow " "TTFN" when she returns to the 1940s from 1998.References
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