you’re thinking too much like a computer.
in human speech, when “quote unquote” is used, it’s typically obvious when the quote ends from the tone and pace of what is said.
the function of “quote unquote” is to reduce the awkwardness and increase the impact of reciting a quote by obviating the need to state the word “unquote” at the end of a quote.
compare:
He ended every speech with quote and carthege must be destroyed unquoto
with
He ended each speech with quote unquote carthege must be destroyed
Try saying both of those out loud. I think you’ll agree that the second one sounds less awkward and more impactful
Deebster@infosec.pub 6 months ago
People sometimes introduce a quote by doing that air quote gesture - I suppose with this logic they should only do it on one hand at the quote start and use the other hand to end the quote.
squaresinger@lemmy.world 6 months ago
The air quote is usually signed til the end of the quote. It being done in parallel to the spoken language doesn’t really have an equivalent in purely sequential written language.
But yeah, I’d be kinda confused if someone quoted a longer segment and only used the air quotes super briefly before the first word, ending them before the first word started.