Not like it matters really, but can I ask a silly question?
“Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit but the highest form of intelligence,” wrote that connoisseur of wit, Oscar Wilde.
Why is it that very often only the first half "sarcasm is the lowest form of wit" is quoted and the other half "the highest form of intelligence" is ignored?
I'm inclined to think that sarcasm/satire is a sophisticated linguistic expression. It is art. But then, language is part of culture. So, if there isn't a culture that appreciates the art of sarcasm/satire, it is received as nothing but offensive, I guess.
I think sarcasm is lost on people who read everything very literally. In their defense, text misses all the signals body language can supply to get meaning across.
Posted by David_CooperBrazil's native language groups
Posted by David_CooperI like language maps - if you find any, please share them here.
Posted by JettyWhen a word has more than one meaning. 🤣
Posted by David_CooperTest your French
Posted by JettyIneptocracy
Posted by JettyI wonder if this works in any other language, though, in Chinese, for example.
Posted by JettyWait! You don't pronounce the L?! 😂
Posted by David_CooperI've often seen these in English, but doubtless the rest of the world does them too.
Posted by David_CooperShrödinger's cat
Posted by misternatureboyAnybody else using Duolingo to study another language? Estoy estudiando español.
Posted by EquusDanceJust read a fascinating article on the origins of language.