Few words have a birthday as precisely documented as 'OK'. On 23 March 1839, the Boston Morning Post published a humorous item that included the abbreviation 'O.K.' standing for 'oll korrect' — a comic misspelling of 'all correct'. This was part of a short-lived but documented fashion in Boston and New York newspapers for creating abbreviations of deliberately misspelled phrases: 'O.W.' for 'oll wright' (all right), 'G.T.D.H.D.' for 'give the devil his due', and so on. Most of these abbreviations vanished within months. 'OK' survived.
The reason it survived is almost certainly the presidential election of 1840. Martin Van Buren, the incumbent president seeking re-election, was nicknamed 'Old Kinderhook' after his birthplace in Kinderhook, New York. His supporters formed the 'OK Club' in New York City, and suddenly the abbreviation 'OK' had a second, independent meaning — one tied to a highly visible political campaign. The double meaning gave the word resilience: even after the abbreviation craze faded, 'OK' remained in circulation through its political association.
The etymologist Allen Walker Read spent decades researching the word's origins, publishing his findings in a series of landmark papers in the journal American Speech in 1963 and 1964. Read traced hundreds of early occurrences and definitively established the 1839 Boston origin, refuting numerous competing folk etymologies that had accumulated over the years.
Those alternative theories were creative and numerous. One persistent claim held that OK derived from the Choctaw word 'okeh' (it is so), popularised by Andrew Jackson. Another suggested a West African origin — the Wolof or Mande 'waw-kay' (yes indeed) — brought to America through the slave trade. A Greek origin was proposed: 'ola kala' (all good). A Finnish origin, a Scottish origin ('och aye'), and a German origin ('ohne Korrektur', meaning 'without correction' — a printer's mark) were all advanced at various times. Read's meticulous newspaper search found no evidence
The word's spelling has been variable from the start. 'O.K.' with periods, 'OK' without, and 'okay' (the fully written-out form that emerged in the late 19th century to make the spoken form more legible in prose) have all been standard at various times. The spoken form is /oʊˈkeɪ/ in American English, and this is the form that spread globally. 'Okay' as a spelling became dominant in casual writing by the early 20th century.
The global spread of OK is one of the most remarkable stories in the history of language. It has been borrowed into virtually every language on Earth — Japanese, Arabic, Swahili, Russian, Hindi, French, Mandarin Chinese — usually with minimal modification. The reasons are clear: it is short (two syllables), phonologically simple (available sounds in almost every language), and semantically useful (a general-purpose marker of acceptance, adequacy, or agreement that fills a genuine gap in many languages).
In English, OK functions across multiple grammatical categories in a way that is unusual for a single word. It can be an adjective ('the food was OK'), an adverb ('she did OK on the test'), a verb ('the manager OK'd the proposal'), a noun ('I need your OK'), and an interjection ('OK, let's start'). This grammatical flexibility has contributed to its staying power and spread.
Linguist David Dalby famously called OK 'the one true universal word', and while this may be an overstatement, it captures something real about how a single coinage from a Boston newspaper's joke column became — in less than two centuries — a piece of the global linguistic commons.