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1. Which punctuation mark should we use when we have two independent clauses that have (show) a relationship between them? Would a colon be correct?-- No. A semicolon or a full stop. (I presume that you are speaking of two clauses with no
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In context I think he means to say that the act of killing him is final, that after that there is nothing more she can do or say to him. Then she says she doesn't need to say anything more after that-- the act of killing by itself will do the
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The semi-colons separate the items as they look complicated. They make it easier to read. The items are not simple. For example: I have a few close friends. They are Peter, Mary, Jack, Paul and James.
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. Always leave one space after a comma, colon, semicolon or full stop. My friends often go to the gymnasium to work out, but I think differently from them. I go to work by bicycle every day , I take my daughter for a walk after supper , I do
Topic of the Moment!
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mister micawber
228 days ago
Essays, Punctuation, Commas, Colons, Semicolons, Music, Colours, Relationships, Friendships, Friends, Arts
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Hi, this is an old question, but as it is the first google hit for this subject, here's a quick answer: However, if you look for an answer... If you look for a quick answer , however, look no further. Also there seems to be a new trend of
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Hi Personally I would use an alternative word to 'got'. I found success, or gained success; the success was thanks to my friends help. I also the think the correct grammar would require a semicolon, rather than the comma, as both parts are
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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tikky
347 days ago
Plurals, Commas, Punctuation, Apostrophes, Semicolons, Relationships, Writing, Animals, Friendships, Mistakes, Friends
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Yes, but it's not a very good sentence. Always looking to improve. 1) Despite this tragedy, he has displayed uncommon valor and ... between "important" and "it" and do Ihave a run-on sentence. No, you do not. Well, you do,
alt.usage.english
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harry sampson
5 yr 108 days ago
Paragraphs, Business, Context, Sentences, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Punctuation, References, Career, Students, Classes, Semicolons, Expressions
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} Are there any clues or fuzzy rules which can help recognizing a word } containing 's', 'z', 'x' and so on? You're talking about reducing the (z) sounds to written English, right? (The (s) sounds probably aren't
alt.usage.english
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r j valentine
5 yr 138 days ago
Apostrophes, British English, Commas, Hyphenation, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Punctuation, Semicolons
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Charles Riggs filted: In twenty words or less, why on earth would you? See below. The bigger problem is that dashes are, like, not cool. ... debated sentence. I believe my man Jim Joyce would also. You people seem to be talking about replacing the
alt.usage.english
by
skitt
5 yr 188 days ago
Commas, Colons, Sentences, Countries, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Punctuation, Styles, Semicolons
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Charles Riggs filted: In twenty words or less, why on earth would you? I wondered how long that would take. I started wondering ... find colons in post-dash situations very not, as in cool. The bigger problem is that dashes are, like, not cool.
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