Britva415
"Alabaster," my ass
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2022
- Posts
- 5,563
I see it in fiction on Lit where it doesn't seem intentionally facetious at all, what it seems like is unintentionally clumsy. There are a lot of authors who, when they write, they seem to be writing with some kind of idea in mind about "what writing sounds like," and they wind up putting cliches from nonfiction styles into their fiction narration and their fictional characters' dialog—situations where these constructions are jarringly out of place.I couldn't give cites, but I feel like most of the time when I've seen this in fiction it's been as part of an intentionally facetious tone. That works for me but it'd probably feel stilted if used unironically.