This, of course, could just as well be in The Pit, where it may well end up anyway. I wouldn’t mind… But to keep it short:
When you read $MELANIA or $TRUMP do you read it like Smell-ania and Strumpf (sock in German, in case it is relevant), so that both together become a smelly sock? Or is the dollar sign so far away from a capital s in your mind that it does not accur to you to form these words.
I, for one, have the impression somebody is trolling the presidential couple big time. Of course, some people would not mind a little trolling in exchange for several billion $.
BTW: $TRUMP and $MELANIA are not easy to write in this board: you have to put a \ before the $ or HTML does funny things with your text afterwards.
In software development in certain languages and environments it’s very common to prefix words representing variable values with “$”. After years in that biz, I mentally pronounce your examples as “dollar melania” and “dollar trump”. Where “dollar” doesn’t contain any connotation of money; it’s just a semantically meaningless symbol like “#melania” is pronounced “pound melania” or “&melania” is pronounced “amp melania”. Or, for humor, “!melania” is pronounced “bang melania”.
Conversely, when somebody writes a word with embedded $, such as “a$$hat” or “dealer$hip”, I mentally pronounce that as if they’re "S"s: “asshat” & “dealership”. But with a “flavor” or emotional tone of derision or contempt somehow related to money.
Yeah, although I recognise it as a dollar sign, the fact that I’m not in a place where dollars are currency does (I think) make it seem like it might be intended as an S, if I see it in any context that isn’t recognisable as ‘currency’ to me (of which $TRUMP would be an example - I had to google that to figure out it’s his crypto thing)
Offtopic, but I frequently get scam emails offering me the chance to participate in the supposed embezzlement of sums such as $100,000,000,000 billion dollars USD - that is: ‘100 quintillion dollars dollars US dollars’.
Cubic dollars are good for building wealth, or building anything, really.
He just started it the day before the inauguration. She started hers the day of the inauguration. That was yesterday. Seems like ages ago already…
And it seems to be an important distinction that it is not his crypto thing, but his crypto meme thing.
As I wrote, they are new. He started his 48 hours ago, she hers 24 hours ago. And it has been highly lucrative so far.
Next one, I guess, will be $BARRON.
Programmer here, so a $ preceding a word defaults to a variable name. In places where it’s obviou$ly replacing an S it gets interpreted as an S. Presumably to get past censor filters,
Choice of upper or lower case makes a slight difference to my perception too - I suppose because (at least in the typeface I am seeing here) $ more closely resembles an uppercase S than lower.
So $TRUMP looks - to me - more like STRUMP than $trump or $Trump look like Strump or STrump (even accounting for expected initial capitalisation of proper nouns).