(TLA = "three letter acronym/abbreviation":-) abbreviations we try to use pervasively in the system As Dan Barlow pointed out long ago on the mailing list, unabbreviated names are easier to deal with than abbreviated names, because you never need to remember what abbreviation to use. That's true, but in a language like Lisp which depends on compound names for important things like structure accessors, that can lead to painful names like MAKE-EXTERNAL-ENTRY-POINT-LAMBDA-EXPRESSION and associated indenting confusion. In an effort to have some of the best of both worlds, I've attempted to impose standard abbreviations for some things. Ideally, you don't need to remember whether to abbreviate it, or what abbreviation to use, because it's always the same abbreviation. Some of these already were used pretty consistently in CMU CL. Others not so much, but in sbcl-0.7.0 I put some effort into making them more consistent. ARG argument DX dynamic-extent FUN function GC garbage collect(ion) N new: number, as in e.g. N-PASSES or N-WORD-BITS old: conventional prefix for temporary variables used to implement evaluate-only-once semantics in macros NLE non-local entry NLX non-local exit (in compiler IR2) SB storage base (in compiler IR2) SC storage class (in compiler IR2) TN temporary name (?) (in compiler IR2) VAR variable (in the lisp entity "noun" sense, not in the adjectival sense) XEP external entry point Making them even more consistent (within the limits of ANSI and MOP compatibility) would probably be good.