I understand the need to quote someone without using your hands. Example:
Alice said Bob quote intervened unquote.
This, I understand. Her use of the word "intervened" was a direct quote.
My question:
Some times, someone will say
quote unquote
in the middle of a sentence, with no word in between. What's the purpose of this?
PS. The word "quote" just lost all meaning in my head. Sorry if my post has the same effect on you.
Best Answer
Quote and unquote are verbal representations of quotation marks, exactly as you suggest in the beginning of your question. In your first example, they take the place of the quotation marks directly:
In your second example, they indicate that the following (or occasionally preceding) word or phrase is to be understood as though it's a quote:
When this occurs, the quoted phrase is probably set off intonationally, so you can hear where the boundaries are despite the word order.
Either version can be used with the same meaning, but I think the latter version is especially associated with so-called “scare quotes”. As Wikipedia says:
To my ear, this is especially likely when quote unquote precede the “quoted” phrase. It's a verbal signal of irony.