This is something between a question and a shower thought. People use air quotes to stimulate “quoting” a word or short phrase in the middle of a sentence. Are there any other punctuation marks that can be stimulated this way? And in particular, is there a gesture for parentheses (like this)?

If not, then why not? How did quotes get special treatment?

And if yes - how many people would actually understand what those other gestures mean? (I am reminded of that scene from Friends where Joey admits he doesn’t know what air quotes mean)

Image taken from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_quotes / https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Airquotes.gif

  • CallMeAl (like Alan)@piefed.zip
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    17 days ago

    No because there is no need. Air quotes indicate that you are quoting someone elss. You are speaking someone else’s words.

    A sentence with a parenthetical clause is still gramatically valid without the marks to offset the clause. The is no need to indicate it visually.

      • CallMeAl (like Alan)@piefed.zip
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        17 days ago

        Air quotes almost never mean literally quoting someone else.

        The very wikipedia article you are quoting says that’s exactly what air quotes are right in the opening paragraph. As it says, air quotes are used in speech as quotation marks are using in print. You’re not wrong that its often about the sarcasm, etc but it is primarily in relation to another’s speech.

        It also includes this reference which describes the sarcastic use of air quotes as “a snide, easy way to discredit or distance oneself from the other side’s words”