These lines of poetry from "Totally like whatever, you know?" are most likely stated as a question for what purpose? "Invisible question marks and parenthetical (you know?)'s have been attaching themselves to the ends of our sentences?"
Yes.
A. to make fun of the manner of speaking that the writer is criticizing B. To show that questions are always appropriate C. To emphasize the speaker's confusion D. To show that the speaker does not know how to use punctuation
You picked a difficult one. You owe me a metal if I get this right, m8.
A seems too basic, and B doesn't make sense, even from the author's perspective... He could be confused, D seems pretty straightforward...
If I had to pick one, I'd chose... C. I'm not so confident about it, though.
It's not C for sure
Alright, then B doesn't make sense, so it's A or D.
Is this poem/piece a satire?
Gotta be A now that I'm not reading it in a re*arded surfer voice.
Poetry. It's called "Totally like whatever you know?"
Lol yeah
Was it correct?
I helped you get it?
Thanks for the medal, man.
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