This is something I first noticed about a year ago, give or take. Like, I’ll say “the sky is purple” and someone will respond with “it’s blue?” Why do people do that?

It’s such a strange thing for me, because I’m used to question marks being used for questions, not statements. It feels like at some point, I accidentally fell into an alternate dimension where this is considered a normal use of punctuation.

I know English is a continually-evolving language, so things like this shouldn’t be unexpected. Even still, this development feels bizarre to me.

  • PlzGivHugs@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I think its always been around. It might be more common to see it without further qualification (IE, “It’s blue, isn’t it?”), possibly because of the popularity of short-form content, but I don’t think its a new thing.

    • mrbigmouth502@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Maybe it is short-form content that’s popularized it. I don’t use TikTok, and I don’t watch a lot of YouTube Shorts either.

      On that note, don’t you think it’s funny how short videos used to be the norm on YouTube a long time ago? I kinda miss those days.