“尖酸刻薄”; “讽刺”
"Snarky"; "Snark"

原始链接: https://notoneoffbritishisms.com/2025/10/13/snarky-snark/

“snarky”一词,意为讽刺或不敬,在过去25年中在美国和英国的受欢迎程度激增,其名词形式“snark”也随之流行。虽然人们常错误地将其与路易斯·卡罗尔的诗作联系起来,但它的起源实际上非常复杂。 通过词典追溯,“snark”最初在19世纪的苏格兰指的是打鼾或抱怨,与令人不快的词语“nark”有关。 “snarky”的首次记录用法出现在20世纪初的英国文学作品中,尤其是在E. Nesbit的作品中,她用它来表示“愤怒”或“无礼”。 这个词逐渐跨越大西洋,1915年出现在美国出版物中。 名词“snark”是一个更近期的发展,出现在20世纪80年代末。 它目前的流行可能源于它的发音——“sarcastic”(讽刺)和“snarl”(咆哮)的混合——以及当代社会中讽刺态度的增加。

一个黑客新闻的讨论探讨了“讽刺”作为一种沟通方式的起源和兴起。最初的帖子认为,讽刺随着互联网的出现,成为一种高效地传递智慧和归属感的方式,尤其是在注意力经济中。它是一种“压缩算法”,优先考虑快速、有影响力的“感觉”而非细致的论证——这种机制受到以互动为导向的平台奖励。 评论者将讽刺与愤世嫉俗区分开来,将其定义为“愤世嫉俗的理论”,而愤世嫉俗本身则是“自命不凡”。对话涉及了这个词的词源(尽管有假设,但与路易斯·卡罗尔的诗歌无关)及其英国起源。 许多用户分享了幽默的轶事和参考,突出了讽刺的文化存在——从 19 世纪的俚语到 90 年代的嘻哈音乐。最终,该帖子将讽刺定义为不仅仅是愤世嫉俗增加的产物,而是对现代在线沟通激励的回应。
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原文

Of the words at the top of this post, Merriam-Webster defines the adjective, “snarky,” as “sarcastic, impertinent, or irreverent in tone or manner.” “Snark,” meanwhile, can be either a noun (“an attitude or expression of mocking irreverence and sarcasm”) or verb (“to say something snarky”).

Google Ngram Viewer shows both words shooting up in popularity over the past twenty-five years or so, in both the U.S. and the U.K. They apparently felt somewhat fresh in 1997 when Spy magazine took the trouble to point out numerous recent uses: “people on SNL made ‘snarky portrayals.’ VHI’s Pop-Up Videos had ‘snarky comments.’ Tennis players used ‘snarky, talk.’ Chris Rock’s HBO show ‘got off to a snarky start,’ The Dandy Warhols’ hit single had a ‘snarky title,’ (‘Not if You Were the Last Junkie on Earth’). Gen Xers were reading ‘snarky free weeklies.’ … The New York Observer had ‘snarky commentators.'”

The etymology does not go back to Lewis Carroll’s 1876 poem about an imaginary creature, “The Hunting of the Snark” (as some have assumed). Instead, the word has multiple roots, An 1866 glossary of “Shetland and Orkney Words” lists “snark” as a verb meaning “to make a snoring noise.” Sixteen years later, the OED reports, Jamieson’s Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language included the verb as meaning, “To fret, grumble, or find fault with one.” The OED also suggests a connection with “nark,” meaning “An annoying, unpleasant, obstructive, or quarrelsome person.” The dictionary has a citation from 1846: “They are the rankest narks vot ever God put guts into, or ever farted in a kickses case.” Most of the later examples of “nark” are from Australia or New Zealand. Another antipodean connection is that Digger Smith, a 1917 Australian book-length poem by C.J. Dennis, has a glossary at the end defining “snarky” as “angry.”

The first OED citation for “snark” as a verb comes from a 1904 novel, The Phoenix and the Carpet, by the English children’s book author E. (Evelyn) Nesbit: “He remembered how Anthea had refrained from snarking him about tearing the carpet.

Remarkably, the dictionary’s first example of “snarky” is a line of dialogue from another Nesbit book, the well-known The Railway Children, from 1906: “Don’t be snarky, Peter. It isn’t our fault.” But I can antedate that by a year, with this quote (with telltale quotation marks) from Law Notes, published in London in May 1905:

For the purposes of this blog, it’s relevant that all the other examples from the next decade I’ve found either in the OED or through Google Books are from Britain. Nesbit’s niece, Dorothea Deakin, seemed to have caught her aunt’s enthusiasm for the word, and put this line in a 1908 short story: “Martin isn’t often snarky, but he remarked then in a cold voice, that he objected to backstairs gleanings about any one…” And the following appeared in Punch in 1913: “It didn’t matter a bit if I left my new bat out all night or had to sing a solo in chapel or was bottom of the form and got snarky letters from home or broke rules or anything.”

By 1915, “snarky” had appeared in a U.S. book, Ruggles of Red Gap: “I had received a rather snarky letter from him demanding to know how long I meant to remain in North America.”

“Snark” the noun, meanwhile, doesn’t show up till the very late 1980s. Relevant to the recent popularity of all forms of the word, on both sides of the pond, is the way “snarky” sounds like a portmanteau word, combining “sarcastic” and “snarl.” That, plus the fact that we live in extremely snarky times.

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