First let's look at some samples from text in real life. The "Press and Journal" posted an article today titled "Business as usual, hopefully." An article on http://thelinknewspaper.ca, also posted today, begins with the sentence "Hopefully we have reached a time in human consciousness where we understand that Christmas, as it exists in most households, is a big, corporate scam." There are other grammatical issues with that sentence, unless the author is trying to portray something very different from what it seems he is trying to portray, but we'll ignore those for now. In the first example, the way hopefully is used makes it seem that business as usual is conducted in a hopeful way, if we look at it with strict grammatical adherence. The second example explains the manner in which we have reached a time where we understand such and such. We have reached this time in a hopeful manner.
"Now wait a minute! This makes no sense," you say. "Everyone I know uses that word that way. Even my English professor does!" Then you go and look up 'hopefully' in an online dictionary. Right there in the second definition, it says "2. It is to be hoped that: 'hopefully, it should be finished by next year.'" "Aha!" you say. "I've proved those snobby grammer, er, grammar police wrong." It is true that hopefully is now accepted for use in this way, but the English language changes over time. For example, mosey is accepted as standard English meaning to "walk leisurely." Mosey originated from the Spanish word vamoose, which means to depart quickly. The English that existed in the early United States did not contain this word, and it was added later after the United States expanded to the west. Hopefully, when used in this manner, is an even later addition to the English language, and this use of the word is still being debated among grammar elitists. After enough people start using a word the wrong way, it becomes acceptable. It may be accepted at first as a 'dialect' only, but soon afterward it becomes standard English.
Here's the real question: how long will it take before contractions such as LOL and ROFL are accepted as English words and added to the dictionaries? Hopefully, not while I'm still around.


