Subject: Re: OT: Random language use question
Author:
Posted on: 2009-11-26 00:11:00 UTC
I talk like this all the time, really. Online and IRL, I'll quote random things at random times and try to make people laugh.
Subject: Re: OT: Random language use question
Author:
Posted on: 2009-11-26 00:11:00 UTC
I talk like this all the time, really. Online and IRL, I'll quote random things at random times and try to make people laugh.
I don't really swear in RL or online, but I have noticed that the way I speak and the way I write or type is different. I normally attribute it to the extra half-second or so between my brain and words appearing on the screen compared to my brain and mouth. This becomes even more obvious than normal when I have to do a speech or something, because if I try and write an actual script for myself, I end up re-writing it in my head while I'm giving the speech.
As you can imagine, I don't bother with scripts anymore.
I swear more online mostly because I feel more comfortable with it, but -- the tangents? The derailings? The RANDOM CAPSLOCK? Pretty close to how I talk. It's easier to understand because you aren't getting (many of) the dropped letters/syllables, there's not the Sarcasm Inherent In The Capital Letters Dammit Jai It's Your Fault I Do These Title Caps, and online I'm more likely to do separate sentences instead of trying to make a point in one long sentence that I shouldn't be able to get out without breathing and asIfinishitIendupspeedingandhighpitchedandlikethis, but other than that -- pretty close together.
...I apologize more online too, probably because there's more of a lag for me to do it in.
...Dutch people sound like Mexicans. Or at least like people in my town. Just saying.
(Although I guess part of it is that Spanish you have to match so much, so if you just hear the verb - for example - you might know the gender of the person who did the thing, when they did it and how familiar the speaker is with them? I'd say what they were wearing as well, but then I'd be exaggerating just a bit.)
I talk like this all the time, really. Online and IRL, I'll quote random things at random times and try to make people laugh.
Is there no difference at all in how you phrase things on and offline, then? Not the content of what you say, but the words you choose to express it, I mean.
I swear pretty much equally online and in real life. The only difference, I think, is my tendency to shout a bit more (i.e. all caps) when I'm swearing online. Interestingly I've been swearing less at uni, since one of the group I hang out with there doesn't like people swearing and will object to it.
As for grammar... definitely better online. Especially when talking to people I know are ESL.
Having lived with you for two months, dear, I can safely say that you allcaps your swearing out loud too.
Mind, that's partially because most of my online time is spent talking to people who swear every few sentences when they are angry, which is a noticeable portion of the time.
I think we all do that - it may have been eaten by the ether, but try scrolling back through a few pages on here; someone asked about politics a few months back, and my drunken reply was expletives every other word. The brain deals with expletives differently to the rest of language, and they come out when you're impassioned.
I'm now wondering what the hell the guy at the counter must have thought if he overheard that conversation. Even if he didn't hear the squicky bits it was still two people talking about glue and grapefruit juice and laughing uncontrollably ... eh, given that I was in drag at the time he's unlikely to recognise me if he does see me again.