phrase usage - Is "with all due respect" now mainly used as a sarcastic expression?
With all due respect is an idiomatic expression which has been used with he following meaning since the 19th century:.
- This phrase always precedes a polite disagreement with what a person has said or brings up a controversial point. [c. 1800] (From AHD)
but according to the following extract from the Grammarist its meaning has changed in recent years and its usage now suggests a sarcastic and possibly disrespectful tone:
With all due respect has become an overused phrase, it is now often used sarcastically to mean the exact opposite of what it states. Political debaters and others may preface a rebuttal to an argument with, with all due respect. In this case, a subtle disrespect is intended.
In 2008, the Oxford dictionary compiled a list of the most irritating phrases in the English language, the phrase with all due respect came in as the fifth most irritating phrase in the English language. Perhaps because of its changing function from a phrase meant to mitigate hard feelings to a phrase that allows a subtle disrespect, cloaked in courtesy.
The same topic is discussed also in the following extract from The writing tips:
But in popular culture, the expression has become associated more with insult than with respectful deference:
Bill, with all due respect, you’re an idiot. –Stephen Colbert to Bill O’Reilly
Amanda Marcotte – With All Due Respect, You Are A Moron. –Blog headline.
When do you plan on submitting your resignation? I ask this with all due respect. –Blog reader responding to request for questions for Senator Richard Durbin.
The 2006 movie Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, may have influenced the popularity of “with all due respect” used to introduce a blatantly disrespectful and offensive comment. At least twice in the movie, Ricky Bobby says something extremely vulgar to his team owner. He has the mistaken notion that prefacing a remark with the expression “with all due respect” gives a speaker license to insult and offend.
Questions:
Has the meaning of this old expression mainly changed to a sarcastic idiom?
What alternative analogous idiomatic expression could now be used instead to avoid possible misunderstandings?
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