Internet jargon, or “netspeak”, is popular to young people. 21. ___________
It can be fun, convenient and, sometimes, vulgar. That vulgarity
came on fire in a new official report. On Oct 15, the Ministry 22. ___________
of Education released off a Chinese language report for 2014. 23. ___________
While affirming the negative role of some netspeak catchwords, 24. ___________
the report also called for the regulation of offensive Internet lingo.
According to the report, words like diaosi, or loser, epitomize
the rude netspeak what has blanketed the Internet. Even some 25. ___________
medium outlets are using these words, said the report. “These 26. ___________
vulgar words amplify the negative emotions of some Web usages 27. ___________
and pollute the online community,” said an opinion piece by
Xinhua. Behind every trend that lies a social or psychological 28. ___________
need, though. The popularity of vulgar Internet lingo results
from a tendency that the use of these vulgar words seen 29. ___________
as a mean of entertainment, the Workers’ Daily pointed out. 30. ___________