Maybe she should end her emails with an appropriate vintage cartoon, like from the strip about the little girl and her bald friend. Wish I could remember the girl’s name!
My personal modus operandi is just to use a style so overly formal that it creates a comical effect. Like “At what point will the food be in a state to be transported my-mouthwards?”
The use of incontinent ellipses reminds me too much of the pathetic “poetry” I read in The Highway Evangelist (found a copy at a truck stop in the 70s). Of course the subjects were cloying tearjerk drivel, the rhymes were awful, and the writer(s) had no notion of a thing called “meter,” but the ellipses were what stood out for me, as though the writers were gasping out these little lines in Shatner-like cadences, four to the verse.
Deleted Account2623 about 3 years ago
Just use periods.
Or no punctuation at all
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member about 3 years ago
I think this is a really good example of
The Reader Premium Member about 3 years ago
Maybe she should end her emails with an appropriate vintage cartoon, like from the strip about the little girl and her bald friend. Wish I could remember the girl’s name!
Katsuro Premium Member about 3 years ago
My personal modus operandi is just to use a style so overly formal that it creates a comical effect. Like “At what point will the food be in a state to be transported my-mouthwards?”
VICTOR PROULX about 3 years ago
Peppy?
Decepticomic about 3 years ago
You could always end your emails with a catchphrase. Like… uhhh… ummm… “And that’s all I have to say—”… Wait, hold on… Hold on… Hold on…
Look, catchphrases are hard, ok? Now get off my back with your flack, Jack.
Kip Williams about 3 years ago
The use of incontinent ellipses reminds me too much of the pathetic “poetry” I read in The Highway Evangelist (found a copy at a truck stop in the 70s). Of course the subjects were cloying tearjerk drivel, the rhymes were awful, and the writer(s) had no notion of a thing called “meter,” but the ellipses were what stood out for me, as though the writers were gasping out these little lines in Shatner-like cadences, four to the verse.
Rolf Rykken Premium Member about 3 years ago
: )
John W Kennedy Premium Member about 3 years ago
It has to do with the same phenomenon that resulted (back in the days of letterpress) in the banning from comic books of the word “flick”….