mking624
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2005
- Messages
- 6,589
Sigh.
Look at the Greek root and tell me how sarcasm can be anything other than hurtful or malicious. I didn't take three years of Greek for my health, you know.
Yes, it's a form of irony-- the hurtful form.
Irony need not be hurtful; it is merely a rhetorical device with manifold uses. And sarcasm is the pain-inflicting use.
Satire is irony used against power. It is primarily scornful since it is power which hurts the satirist.
FrontierSuzy is spot on in her observation that distinguishing facetiousness and sarcasm can be difficult. That's why: 1) it's good to know your audience, and 2) be aware of the danger of facetiousness sans body language.
I'm convinced that the message of the mods here is:
Be facetious.
Be ironic.
Even be satirical, if you please.
But do NOT be sarcastic.
Ricks (who says, "Kids, it's the English language. Be careful where you point it.")
I wasn't trying to argue with you (fyi, DH took 2 years of biblical Greek which is nothing like today's Greek - and now he's onto Hebrew



As Lori pointed out, semantics aside, the bottom line is that maliciousness isn't desired or welcomed.
