• Cethin
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    9 months ago

    This case is super obviously sarcastic, but I’m going to use this to push the idea people should use irony or sarcasm punctuation, but none are available in unicode yet for some reason. That needs to change. I know we can use /s, but I hate that representation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irony_punctuation

    • @Pretzilla@lemmy.world
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      29 months ago

      Germans suggested using the Fe symbol for iron, get it?

      Brought to notice by Harry Shearer on his Le Show in the 1990s where he reported it as a sincere submission.

      • @gaael@lemmy.world
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        89 months ago

        Not everyone has the same ability to infer from asituation that a sentence is sacastic (especially with written speech). Sarcasm punctuation makes the joke more accessible, which I believe is a good thing.

      • Cethin
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        59 months ago

        This is not true. Sometimes sarcasm is indistinguishable from a genuinely held belief of someone you’re implying is wrong.

        In spoken language we shift our tone, usually up and down randomly, while being sarcastic, which can be shown by shifting BEtweEEN CapITal anD LowErcASe. This isnt a great solution though, especially typing on mobile. Just like spoken language you can tell if someone is asking a question by the way the sentence is said, we need a marker for written language to tell the reader it’s a question, which is the question mark. If written language didn’t have this issue we wouldn’t need a question mark either. It does have that issue and we do need a question mark and a sarcasm mark.

      • @Gabu@lemmy.world
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        59 months ago

        If you repeat an absurdity in jest often enough, someone will actually believe it as truth. Marking it as sarcasm is a minor moral duty.