What is it about the text messages and emails sent by older people that make me feel like I’m having a stroke?

Maybe they’re used to various shortcuts in their writing that they picked up before autocorrect became common, but these habits are too idiosyncratic for autocorrect to handle properly. However, that doesn’t explain the emails I’ve had to decipher that were typed on desktop keyboards. Has anyone else younger than 45 or so felt similarly frustrated with geriatrics’ messages?

@asklemmy

  • @pelletbucket@lemm.ee
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    197 months ago

    I saw some video where they explained boomers use the ellipses to indicate missing words? like they’re acknowledging that it’s a sentence fragment and not a complete sentence.

    • AggressivelyPassive
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      267 months ago

      That’s actually how the comment above interpreted the ellipses. The difference is more, why the words are missing.

      The “modern” interpretation is that you are too annoyed or afraid to finish the sentence. In the sense of “son of a …” in case of annoyance.

      The “old” interpretation is either temporal (I’m not finished writing) or simply an acknowledgement that the fragment is just a fragment.

      So the modern reader will interpret much more context into the missing words, leading to the exchange above.

    • @sunbrrnslapper@lemmy.world
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      147 months ago

      That kinda makes sense because that is the how it is intended to be used (from a punctuation perspective).

      el·lip·sis noun the omission from speech or writing of a word or words that are superfluous or able to be understood from contextual clues.

      • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        97 months ago

        Hmm, I’d always understood ellipses to mean a thought was trailing off, or as a written indicator of someone thinking as if taking a pause while speaking.

        I was never taught that’s what it means, just seems that’s how most people use it.

        • @sunbrrnslapper@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          I think schools stopped teaching it at some point. Legal docs are one of the places that use it as originally intended. And, I guess, older folks.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Wikipedia ….

        Depending on context, ellipsis can indicate an unfinished thought, a leading statement, a slight pause, an echoing voice, or a nervous or awkward silence.

        I usually use it as “a slight pause” in my attempts at jokes, or to abbreviate a quote

    • @boatswain@infosec.pub
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      27 months ago

      That’s a little different: if you’re quoting someone and cut words out of the middle of the quote, you’d use … to indicate that you’ve modified the quote. It wouldn’t go at the end of a sentence though. It used to be pretty common in newspapers, as I recall.

        • @boatswain@infosec.pub
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          17 months ago

          Indicating trailing off is another way to use it; that’s more literary vs the newspaper thing of indicating removed words. I wouldn’t expect anyone to use it to indicate removed words at the the of a sentence, because you could just end the sentence instead. But some people are weird.

          • @pelletbucket@lemm.ee
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            17 months ago

            I know that they’re weird, but they’re all doing it. there must be a reason. they must have been taught something in school