Does it? It sounds to me like it implies that you wouldn’t clap your hands unless you are happy, you know it, and you also want to show it. All three must be true for it to be hand-clapping time.
What difference would you expect if the “and you know it” clause were omitted?
Suppose there are indeed some people who would clap ”if they’re happy”, but refrain “if they’re happy and they know it”. The implication would be that these people are happy and don’t know it—and yet we’re supposing that they would have clapped “if they’re happy” anyway.
If they didn’t clap, adding the clause would have no effect and its inclusion would have no motivation.
And it implies that if you were happy and didn’t know it, you’d clap anyway if the song didn’t clarify.
Does it? It sounds to me like it implies that you wouldn’t clap your hands unless you are happy, you know it, and you also want to show it. All three must be true for it to be hand-clapping time.
What difference would you expect if the “and you know it” clause were omitted?
Suppose there are indeed some people who would clap ”if they’re happy”, but refrain “if they’re happy and they know it”. The implication would be that these people are happy and don’t know it—and yet we’re supposing that they would have clapped “if they’re happy” anyway.
If they didn’t clap, adding the clause would have no effect and its inclusion would have no motivation.