As I'm sure just about everybody knows, irony is one of the most difficult things to convey clearly online. It's much too easy to misunderstand someone, and think they're being sincere when they're not.
This is not a new problem, of course. And it's not confined to the internet. Whenever I make my students read passages from Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, for example, I have to point out the passages where Gibbon is being ironic, and means the opposite of what he says.
As a consequence, there have been a number of suggestions for punctuation marks that would indicate when a person is being ironic. The oldest and simplest of these marks is the "percontation point" or "rhetorical question mark" suggested by Henry Denham in the 1580s. It's literally a backwards question mark, like so:
It's added at the end of the sentence, to show that the writer is being ironic.
This would eliminate a lot of misunderstandings online, and could easily be added to a standard keyboard in place of some other punctuation mark.
I mean, seriously--when was the last time you used the #? I'm not even sure what the # is called. The pound sign?
What do you all think? Should we bring back the percontation point?
This is not a new problem, of course. And it's not confined to the internet. Whenever I make my students read passages from Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, for example, I have to point out the passages where Gibbon is being ironic, and means the opposite of what he says.
As a consequence, there have been a number of suggestions for punctuation marks that would indicate when a person is being ironic. The oldest and simplest of these marks is the "percontation point" or "rhetorical question mark" suggested by Henry Denham in the 1580s. It's literally a backwards question mark, like so:

It's added at the end of the sentence, to show that the writer is being ironic.
This would eliminate a lot of misunderstandings online, and could easily be added to a standard keyboard in place of some other punctuation mark.
I mean, seriously--when was the last time you used the #? I'm not even sure what the # is called. The pound sign?
What do you all think? Should we bring back the percontation point?