3point14
Pi
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 23,101
Thanks for the explanation. I'm having some excellent Andalusian olives right now, do you think Nick would like one of those?
I've recently become convinced that the whole comma-where-you-would-breathe approach is pretty useless, although it often happens that commas end up in those gaps.
I've found this exceptionally useful, especially the comma section.
http://www.informatics.sussex.ac.uk/department/docs/punctuation/node00.html
Also I thought that the issue of punctuation in or out of quotation marks depended on whether the punctuation was appropriate to the quote. I had no idea that it was a UK vs. US thing.
I hate sentences without nouns or verbs. Really. And that rule about not ending a sentence with a preposition is something I've carried on about before.
I learned at my mother's knee -- in America -- that the punctuation went with the context of the quote, but since phrases (or partial sentences) rarely require a comma at the end (unless you're quoting text from a written source), there would be very little use for it in a quote context.<snip>
Also I thought that the issue of punctuation in or out of quotation marks depended on whether the punctuation was appropriate to the quote. I had no idea that it was a UK vs. US thing.
Would it be pedantic of me to point out that punctuation is not a part of grammar?
I learned at my mother's knee -- in America -- that the punctuation went with the context of the quote...

The little girl wanted a bedtime story, and asked her mother to bring one upstairs. Mom arrives with the wrong book, and the girl says, "What did you bring that book I don't want to be read to out of up for?"
Did Caesar say, "I came, I saw, I conquered."
vs.
Did Caesar say, "I came, I saw, I conquered"?!
Spot on I reckon, except [pedant] that the comma before the quotes is needless, and the exclamation mark following the question mark is superfluous and ugly. [/pedant]
blobru;3154159Bad grammar girl sounds like she needs a lollipop. Good grammar girl sounds like she needs an exorcist.[/quote said:Tagline!
"Bad grammar makes you sound like you need a lollipop, while good grammar makes you sound like you need an exorcist."
Should I replace the comma with a semicolon?
Why end a sentence with only one preposition when you can do so much more?
The little girl wanted a bedtime story, and asked her mother to bring one upstairs. Mom arrives with the wrong book, and the girl says, "What did you bring that book I don't want to be read to out of up for?"
Only if you delete the "while" while you're at it.Tagline!
"Bad grammar makes you sound like you need a lollipop, while good grammar makes you sound like you need an exorcist."
Should I replace the comma with a semicolon?
Awesome! Thnk you for introducing me to something genuinely new and interesting.This sounds like a job for INTERROBANG!
This is the one about the pub-signwriter not leaving a spaces between "Coach" and "and" and "and" and "Horses".Can you create a sentence that contains legitimately, the word 'and' five times in succession?
Awesome! Thnk you for introducing me to something genuinely new and interesting.
This is the one about the pub-signwriter not leaving a spaces between "Coach" and "and" and "and" and "Horses".
So yes, but you can also have seven "ands" in succession if you construct a similar story about the band in the Commitments called "And and and".
Then if you were to report that you had legitimately constructed a sentence with seven successive "ands", but had written it down without the relevant spaces you could have a sentence with 13 successive "ands" i.e., "I accidentally left out the spaces between 'and' and 'and' and 'and' and 'and' and 'and' and 'and' and 'and'"
Then you could report that you had written that sentence incorrectly and so on ad infinitum.
It's similar to the fact that you can always make a longer sentence just by making it part of reported speech. So if anyone ever says to you "The longest sentence is 'X'" you can reply "No, a longer sentence is 'Who cares that you think that the longest sentence is 'X''"
The British also spell color wrong.![]()