"That sounds like a good idea......."-"Is there something bothering you with the idea?"-"No, the idea is GOOD.....🙂"
Can someone explain this to me?
Old people use quotation marks to indicate emphasis, as a substitute for italics (which many of them could not produce on the old typewriters they learned to write on), whereas young people use them to indicate sarcasm or falseness. They’re used as “scare quotes”.
And old people use ellipses simply to indicate a pause, or for some other incomprehensible reason I’m not aware of. But young people use ellipses to indicate passive-aggression.
So an old person could type something like:
how are things going with your “boyfriend”….
and what they mean is
How are things going with your boyfriend? [Im so excited for you, sweetie, and I wanna hear about it]
But a young person would interpret that sentence as
How are things going with your so-called boyfriend…. [I say, while seething with contempt for him and possibly for you too]
The linguistic difference across generations is beautifully explained here thank you
You can make one here
The holy trinity
This is so fucking wholesome wtf
1/23/2022
This post has strong 1997 internet energy.
when you start reading again and it's like oh. oh . the sun actually does still shine.
christ on a cracker (the last supper, oil on saltine)
I don’t know why, but reading “oil on saltine” just sent me
Onions
OiI on canvas
username checks out
[ID: a painting of yellow, purple, and white onions set on a reflective black table. End ID]
Nightclub singer at home, ca. 1960s
Heart of Water by Claire Choquet on Flickr
Keep Your Powder Dry (1945)
Detail: Reclining nude, 1879, by Luis Ricardo Falero.
Marilyn Monroe photographed by Bert Reisfeld (1952).
April 23, 1929
Journals of Anais Nin 1927-1931 [volume 4]
Decorative cover of ‘Mary Jones.’ Published by the American Tract Society (1848).
archive.org