I occasionally use the language-lawyer tag for questions that are abstract but not asking about a specific part of a language standard. Here's a recent example.
Unordered function evaluation for functions returning void
This question received a couple downvotes and I understand that. (It's doing better now that there's an answer.) It's not quite what people expect - there's no practical application behind the question - so I want a tag that warns people about that.
On the other hand, language-lawyer sounds like I should be citing clauses or arguing semantics of the text of the standard so maybe I'm just creating clutter for people who are looking for that sort of thing.
What do folks expect when they see language-lawyer? Is it a good tag for abstract questions that are not about a specific practical problem but which are also not asking about a specific portion of a language standard? If not, is there a better tag for this?
This meta SO answer comes close.
https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/256514/1128289
After reading it I'm still unsure. In the linked question, I'm not throwing references around but it does fulfill the pedantic wankery criterion.