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welp

[ welp ]

interjection

, Nonstandard.
  1. an informal variant of well used to indicate disappointment, resignation, or acceptance at the beginning of an utterance:

    Welp, this might not work out for us after all.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of welp1

First recorded in 1945–50; form of well as an isolated or emphatic utterance, with an excrescent p representing closing of the lips, creating an unreleased labial stop; compare the parallel use of p in nope ( def ) and yup ( def ).
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Example Sentences

To put it bluntly: If Harris was considered too Black to be our first Black female president, then, welp!

From Slate

“Welp, it was fun during the pandemic. Cherish those memories, I guess🤷🏾‍♂️” added WGN reporter Glenn Marshall Jr.

“I don’t have tickets yet, but I got the hotel, flight, and I thought ‘Welp, if I lock into something, I’ll go,’” Bray said.

“I don’t have tickets yet, but I got the hotel flight, and I thought ‘Welp, if I lock into something, I’ll go,’” Bray said.

Welp, the first primary came and went last week, and Trump beat his final remaining GOP opponent, former U.N.

From Slate

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More About Welp

What does welp mean?

Welp, an alternative pronunciation of well, and is an interjection typically used at the beginning of a sentence to express resignation or disappointment.

Where does welp come from?

Welp appears to originate as a variant of well on the model of nope and yep.

Pronunciation may explain why these words feature an expressive, final P. If someone wanted to end an argument, for example, by saying, “Well, that’s just how it is,” they would pause after the word well with their lips already positioned to articulate a P. Linguistic articles provide this as a phonological explanation for welp as early as the 1940s.

In the following decades, welp evolved from a synonym of well to a word with connotations all its own, conveying that a speaker is surrendering to a certain disappointing outcome.

Welp is particularly useful to mark tone where well cannot—for instance, in written communication instead of verbal. For this reason, welp has become a popular expression in online settings. As early as 2001, internet users were looking up the correct spelling of welp. By 2003, Urban Dictionary featured an entry on the term, and by 2006, the earliest Twitter users were including welp in their tweets. Today, welp is very common in social media.

How is welp used in real life?

Many headlines, especially for online news articles about a sad or disappointing situation, begin with an informal welp (e.g., “Welp, ‘Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood’ Just Lost Another Star”). Here, welp is often used to demonstrate resignation to an unsatisfactory reality.

Welp is also popular on social media, where it does not always signify disappointment. Here, welp can simply mean that the user is acknowledging something is happening, whether good or bad. This welp indicates that someone has processed information and is going to respond to it. In this way, welp acts like a discourse marker, used to introduce and invite a discussion of a topic (e.g., “Welp, Beyoncé announced tickets on sale tomorrow. Who wants to go?”).

Welp is sometimes presented on its own, typically as a caption to a photo or video and acting like the verbal equivalent of a shrug gesture. Indeed, on social media, welp is commonly paired with the shrugging emoticon,  ¯_(ツ)_/¯.

More examples of welp:

(SHE shrugs her shoulders as the LIGHTS begin to come back up to full morning.) Welp, that was six years ago, and I’m still stuck here watching the world scoot past my front door…I always did love a view.”
—Margaret Dulaney, The View from Here, 1993

Note

This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.

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