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Sarcasm
Sarcasm is a form of speech or writing which is bitter or cutting, being intended to taunt its target. It is first recorded in English in The Shepheardes Calender in 1579:
It comes from the ancient Greek ''σαρκάζω'' (''sarkazo'') meaning 'to tear flesh' but the ancient Greek word for the rhetorical concept of taunting was instead ''χλευασμός'' (''chleyasmόs''). Sarcasm appears several times in the Old Testament, for example:
Sarcasm is proverbially said to be the lowest form of wit. It is often associated with the use of irony. Hostile, critical comments may be expressed in an ironic way such as saying "don't work too hard" to a lazy worker. The use of irony introduces an element of humour which may make the criticism seem more polite and less aggressive but understanding the subtlety of this usage requires second-order interpretation of the speaker's intentions. This sophisticated understanding is lacking in people with brain damage, dementia, autism and this perception has been located by MRI in the right parahippocampal gyrus.
In certain Ethiopic languages, sarcasm is indicated with a sarcasm mark, a character that looks like a backwards question mark at the end of a sentence, similar to Alcanter de Brahm's proposed irony mark (؟).
References
External links
- BBC News Magazine - The rules of sarcasm
Category:Humor
Category:Figures of speech
Category:Rhetoric
Category:Irony
simple:Sarcasm
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