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Thanks, everyone. According to The American Heritage Guide to Contemporary Usage and Style: With other punctuation Put commas and periods inside closing quotation marks; put colons and semicolons outside. Other punctuation, such as exclamation
General English Vocabulary & Idiom Questions
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jingtian
49 days ago
Commas, Punctuation, Colons, Semicolons, Quotation Marks, Question Marks, Writing, Usages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Styles
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Jingtian, The New York Times style book says: periods and commas, in American usage, always go inside the closing quotation marks, regardless of grammatical logic. Another source gives this example: ...two complete thoughts joined by
General English Vocabulary & Idiom Questions
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anonymous
50 days ago
Commas, Punctuation, Colons, Semicolons, Quotation Marks, Usages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Styles
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Vermin Seranar (1)
Vermin Seranar was born in İstanbul in 1983. Her music education started as Associate Professor Ahmet Ermakastar’s clarinet student at the State Conservatory, Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University. She kept
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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alpheccastars
192 days ago
Commas, Punctuation, Universities, Spelling, Semicolons, Arts, Writing, Music, Students, Songs, Training, Styles, Teaching, Classes, Languages
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. Neither is correct, actually, since both need a semicolon instead of a comma. After that correction, #1 is grammatically correct, while #2 would be OK for e-English: it is a sort of telegraph style. .
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In reference to a discussion about martial arts forms, this statement was made. "Which hand is in front; I think it's the right." Is this improper use of a semicolon? Should the sentence have been separated into individual thoughts?
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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anonymous
286 days ago
Grammar, Punctuation, Semicolons, Arts, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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It should be used sparingly for stylistic purposes , that is, to introduce an emphatic, short sentence. Parenthetical elements of a sentence can be removed with the essential meaning of the sentence remaining. Appositives are always deemed as
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
eddie88
291 days ago
Clauses, Nouns, Noun Phrases, Commas, Punctuation, Semicolons, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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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, Clive, Firstly, I may sound slightly pedantic in that I always put forth stupid rules rather than being flexible and giving my own opinion on the matter. However, I do prefer conforming with the rules simply because I see innumerable
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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eddie88
304 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Adverbs, Commas, Punctuation, Semicolons, Writing, Sentences, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, ESL, Students, Languages
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Hi anonymous person, I think it is a widely accepted notion that when you have two independent clauses connected by a coodinate conjunction (coordinating conjunction? - I think they are the same) and one of them has an internal comma, a semicolon
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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clive
304 days ago
Regards, Clauses, Adverbs, Colons, Commas, Punctuation, Invitations, Semicolons, Writing, Sentences, Animals, ESL, Context, Students, Languages
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Hi, I see my name is appearing in this post, haha. I agree with Clive. A coordinating conjunction plus a semicolon seems unnecessary; however, on rare occasions, it is suitable (if there are internal commas). Semicolons are used in two
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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eddie88
304 days ago
Regards, Clauses, Expressions, Commas, Punctuation, Semicolons, Writing, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Online, Websites, Apologies, Languages
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