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It depends on whom you ask. I'm sure nearly all Americans would use a comma after May 29 and probably the majority of Britons too. However, some British newspapers such as The Guardian have a dislike for commas in dates and write the date as
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There's no one right answer to your question. It's a matter of style and usage varies. In British English people don't usually put a period even after Mr and Dr. That was very common about 40 years ago, though. CB
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(1) There are many island nations, e. g., Japan, Iceland, the Philippines, etc. (2) Mr. Smith is very wealthy, i. e., rich. (3) There are many island nations ( e. g., Japan....). (4) Mr. Smith is wealthy (i. e., rich). (5) There are many island
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The oxford comma is usually omitted in BrE because a listing comma already represents 'and' or 'or'. 'He likes apples and oranges and grapes' becomes 'He likes apples, oranges and grapes' -- among a few other
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I agree with this. I would just add that in normal, everyday British English, version #1 would seem more natural in both speech and natural. I generally walk to the town because it's only a five minute walk. - acceptable It's five
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Hi
Is this where American English differs from British English?
The project would have been taken over by the "unwised."
The project would have been taken over by the "unwised".
The period comes before the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
infinik
193 days ago
American English, British English, Punctuation, Quotation Marks, Sentences, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Here is the rule in American English: (different sources are consistent on this rule, and I suspect British English has the same rule.) When both the whole sentence and the unit enclosed in quotation marks are questions or exclamations, the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
alpheccastars
248 days ago
American English, British English, Punctuation, Quotation Marks, Exclamation Marks, Sentences, Animals, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Is that correct?
I think that a semi colon can precede "e.g." but not follow it.
Is the claim about British English true?
I do know that in U.S. English, one should usually write "; e.g.," or ", e.g.,". The
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I've noticed that when greeting someone in a sentence, a comma often comes before the name.
Example: Hello, Grace.
Should a comma come after the name as well if the sentence continues on?
Example: Hello, Grace, how have you been? Yes.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
311 days ago
British English, Commas, Punctuation, Sentences, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Usages, Salutations, Languages
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Hi all, I´ve found an interesting website about use of commas ( http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_commaproof.html ) and this surprised me: Place commas after each word, phrase, or clause in the series (except the last one, as
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
eff
338 days ago
Clauses, British English, Commas, Punctuation, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Online, Websites, Languages
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