Comma splices

   Share on Facebook  
User_gary  #371082  Sun, 27 May 07 07:45 AM
 But we do each get a Christmas hamper, full of adverbs, prepositions, gerunds, and comma splices.

(Though I'm sorry to say there was a dangling modifier in mine, last year. Office Services please note.)

Please explain the highlighted group of words or rephrase the sentences. [I have alreadly seen meanings from dictionaries for individual word but of no use to understand the sentence as a whole).]

Please you explain.

  
Top 50 Contributor
Joined on Fri, Jan 5 2007
India
Senior Member (2,512)
Honesty is the best policy
This is a live chat room, hosted on the chat page. You can also click here to see the chat in fullscreen.
Tanit  #371110  Sun, 27 May 07 10:29 AM

Hi,

The whole sentence was a joke. One of the mods (sorry, can't remember who ... MrP?) was basically saying that instead of money or presents, they get loads of mistakes for Christmas.

Here are two good pages for comma splices and dangling modifiers .

Here are two examples: 

- comma splice: "Italy is well known for its monuments, there are amazing churches in Rome" (two independent clauses separated by a comma).

- dangling modifier: "Being in a dilapidated condition, I was able to buy the house very cheap." (this example is not mine Smile [:)]! who is in dilapidated conditions? the house or I?)

  
Top 50 Contributor
Joined on Mon, Jul 31 2006
In the middle of the Mediterranean Sea
Senior Member (2,238)
Moderator
For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
AddThis Feed Button RSS Feed: ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
© 2008 MediaCET Ltd.
Terms and Conditions & Terms of Service