drowbot0181 wrote:
I swear if I have to hear this non-question question again I'm going to show the speaker just how *not* quiet I can be.
Somebody approached me again today and said this (at work). It wasn't a question, mind you, but she still got annoyed when I didn't respond. I simply said "I don't talk much" and walked faster.
It is almost rude, I think to say such a thing. What do these people expect in response? "Well, I have Asperger's Syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder characterized by..."
ugh
Something interesting, I was reading about language pragmatics in the field of linguistics, and apparently that is a question. The reading said people use context to understand beyond usual semantics. It's just more polite to say "You're very quiet?" than "Why are you very quiet?" Similar is someone saying, "The radio is loud" instead of "Will you please turn down the radio", or the latter instead of "Turn down the radio." But then looking at what I read on language pragmatics, "You're quiet" could also be a command instead of a question, depending on the context used. From what I read, her being indirect was more of a way of trying to not step on your toes.
Likewise, earlier at a place I was working a woman would always give me girly waves. Then one day she was doing something. I said to her, "You shouldn't do that because it could hurt your teeth," without any intentions on flirting. She then smiled, leaned over and said, "So... Why are you interested in my teeth." She probably did that because rejection is less awkward than if she were to be direct in what her intentions were.