@[email protected]M to Not the [email protected]English • 12 hours agoWoman Who Sued Company for Not Giving Her a Farewell Card Finds Out They Did Buy a Card But Almost No One Signed Itwww.latintimes.comexternal-linkmessage-square20fedilinkarrow-up1124arrow-down12
arrow-up1122arrow-down1external-linkWoman Who Sued Company for Not Giving Her a Farewell Card Finds Out They Did Buy a Card But Almost No One Signed Itwww.latintimes.com@[email protected]M to Not the [email protected]English • 12 hours agomessage-square20fedilink
minus-squareteftlinkEnglish5•edit-210 hours agoI always thought “are you taking the piss?” meant “are you being sarcastic?”. TIL
minus-square@d00erylinkEnglish1•edit-24 hours agoI think it depends on whether Karen knew she didn’t work very hard, in which case her statement about doing “all the hard work” would be sarcasm. However, given the other examples in the article I’d say she truly believed she did all the work - and therefore her statement was not sarcasm.
minus-square@FilthyShroomslinkEnglish15•10 hours agoIt sorta is, it’s more like “are you even taking this seriously?”
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish9•edit-210 hours agoNo, you’re right. That is what it means. The sentence mentioning it in the article was weirdly worded. It wasn’t making any claims about the definition of the phrase, just when it was used.
I always thought “are you taking the piss?” meant “are you being sarcastic?”. TIL
I think it depends on whether Karen knew she didn’t work very hard, in which case her statement about doing “all the hard work” would be sarcasm.
However, given the other examples in the article I’d say she truly believed she did all the work - and therefore her statement was not sarcasm.
It sorta is, it’s more like “are you even taking this seriously?”
No, you’re right. That is what it means.
The sentence mentioning it in the article was weirdly worded. It wasn’t making any claims about the definition of the phrase, just when it was used.