Pain in the English

Forum for the gray areas of the English language

Smileys and other emoticons within parentheses

May 19th, 2004 by Jun-Dai Bates-Kobashigawa

In informal online writing, such as blogs or e-mail, it has become a convention to include an emoticon, particularly a smiley-faced emoticon, to indicate that a comment is not intended to be interpreted literally or taken seriously. Technically speaking, I don’t think emoticons can be considered punctuation, because they generally provide a meaning of their own, rather than simply organizing or emphasizing text. My question is this, when including a smiley-faced emoticon–such as :)–at the end of a side comment in parentheses (dare I provide an example here? :)), do you: allow the closing parenthesis in the emoticon do double duty as a punctuation mark; allow the closing parenthesis of the emoticon run up against the closing parenthesis of the parenthetical statement, creating a doubled chin effect; put an otherwise inexplicable space between the emoticon and the closing parenthesis; or avoid the situation at all costs by rearranging the statement or supplying a different emoticon with a similar meaning (i.e., reword to avoid awkwardness)?

Here are some examples of each of the four solutions I provided:

1. (dare I provide an example here? :-)
2. (dare I provide an example here? :-))
3. (dare I provide an example here? :-) )
4. (dare I provide an example here? :-D)

Keep in mind that many programs will substitute the emoticon with an actual image of a smiley face (not that we should ever allow language to evolve to handle quirks of word processors).

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22 Responses to “Smileys and other emoticons within parentheses”

  1. speedwell says:

    That’s a great question.

    If I know for certain that the program will substitute a smiley face, I usually use the smiley code plus the close paren, ":))". I don’t do this for Microsoft Word, though, because I hate the smiley faces that program defaults to, and it’s too finicky to change.

    In all other cases I avoid using it at all if a close paren follows.

    Another option is to turn the smiley around, "(:" but that’s confusing.

    Current score: 0
  2. svellabrjotur says:

    Examples of what I type:

    1. [dare I provide an example here? :)]
    2. [dare I provide an example here? (:]
    3. (dare I provide an example here? :})

    :} is a somewhat smirk-smile-combination.

    Current score: 0
  3. Peter_Griffin says:

    I say go with 3. But, then again, what the hell do I know?

    Current score: 0
  4. catatronic says:

    I prefer rewording, personally. svellabrjotur’s bracketing is a good idea, but it seems like it might get a little cumbersome…

    Not to offend anyone, but I hate graphical smileys, so that’s definitely not an option!

    Oh yeah, there’s always the "anime style" emotes you could use. -_^

    Current score: 0
  5. Anonymous says:

    I triple-space between the smiley and the last mark – to my mind this makes the smily a picture. :)

    Current score: 0
  6. harbichidian says:

    I space before and after the text within the parenthesis. This came from using the "::action::" form of describing an action when programs would often change the last two symbols of "(::action::)" into a smiley.

    ( dare I provide an example here? :) )

    Current score: 0
  7. The_Devil says:

    What sometimes i do is type something after the smiley
    (dare I provide an example here? :) dare I provide an example here?) but sometimes i can never think of what to say, so i just space it out a bit or put the smiley after
    (dare I provide an example here?) :)

    Current score: 0
  8. KagomeShuko says:

    Four first, then three, then two, and hopefully never one! Of course, you can also use the "left-handed" smilies like speedwell said!

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  9. Alex says:

    Hi! What you do today by evening?

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  10. Steeve says:

    What music prefer?

    Current score: 1
  11. Dori says:

    Hi
    Good site. It would be desirable to return again and again!

    Current score: 0
  12. Baliy says:

    Hi
    As to me to create the same page?

    Current score: 0
  13. Petr says:

    Hi! Who knows still sites similar to this?

    Current score: 0
  14. Polok says:

    Good site. Me very much has liked.

    Current score: 0
  15. Kolin says:

    Hi! Do not prompt as me to send e-mail? = (

    Current score: 0
  16. IngisKahn says:

    Hmm, the spammers could use some help with English…

    Current score: 0
  17. Alexey says:

    Excuse for intrusion, but at me not the big question. How you think how many people on the ground smoke and how many have ceased?

    Current score: 0
  18. Riah Sahiltaahk says:

    This isn't really a problem at all, people are just used to writing smileys the wrong way around. (The correct way has less problems with parentheses (: )

    Current score: 0
  19. majormetts says:

    I do what svellabrjotur does above, taking my cue from Chicago pg 442:

    [dare I provide an example here? :)]

    Current score: 0
  20. A.C. says:

    http://xkcd.com/541

    Current score: 0
  21. Pradeep says:

    good questions. One should go with the option 3 there :)
    Thanks

    Current score: 0
  22. David says:

    Perhaps a guide in this quandary lies in your noting that emoticons are part of *informal* writing, and so perhaps, it just does not matter too much. :-)

    I tend to use your option one, while always feeling forced to stop and think about it!

    I greatly dislike programmes that automatically convert to graphical smileys; Google Chat’s versions are probably the least offensive I know of.

    Current score: 0

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