The intrusive comma changes the sense, and gives the dedicated pedant a linguistic heart attack. |
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After all, I'm driven to distraction by the incorrect and inconsistent use of the comma in practically every publication I read. |
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I once saw a three-line sentence with eighteen commas, which basically meant that there was a comma after every other word. |
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In the simple folk song shown here, a comma to the right of a pattern of notes signifies that a mini-closure should be expressed. |
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A rare comma butterfly was spotted in the garden in Grassington of lepidopterist James Birdsall. |
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This was in the days of hot metal Linotype when, to remove a comma at page-proof stage, was a costly business. |
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In the realm of punctuation, a comma is used for a brief pause, a semicolon for a more moderate pause, and a period as a full stop. |
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A column headed ITV Watch, possibly with a comma and an exclamation mark, would be far more useful, because hardly anyone does. |
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The comma butterfly is now regularly seen much further north than previously. |
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Notice that the comma comes at the end of the clause, not after the subordinating conjunction. |
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The comma thing does make me aware how much I use punctuation in general and commas specifically for intonation in my writing. |
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Normally, a comma or other punctuation mark separates the ending or resumption of direct speech from its interruption. |
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It was finished artwork, and they would ask me to, you know, insert a comma in a word balloon. |
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After all, who cares about the appositive colon or out of control apostrophes or the 17 uses of the comma or rambling apostrophes? |
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If you read my sentence without the red mist descending you might notice there was no comma after the word grammar. |
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But most American publishers always put the period and the comma inside the quotation mark. |
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It also made me think whether there's a single other track I could think of with a comma and question mark in it. |
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When she puts a comma in a sentence, adds an ellipsis, uses a semi-colon, you can bet it's a punctuation mark that belongs wherever she puts it. |
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No theorist even from the ancient world ever considered an interval as small as a comma to be melodic. |
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Make all entries without a dollar sign or comma but with a decimal point and cents. |
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She was very pedantic about the grammar – what was a comma and what was a full stop. |
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Is it permissible to accept today's destructiveness as only a punctuation mark, a comma or a semi-colon, in the story of man's advancement? |
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If you wish, you can set the calculator to display a comma for the decimal point and a dot for the three-digit separator. |
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He could be fastidious, not to say pernickety, about the placing of an inverted comma in some Arabic name. |
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In these complex processes of collective editing, it is easy to trip over a comma or fall at a word. |
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The Board is implementing IFRS into Canadian standards word for word, comma for comma. |
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We have not added so much as a comma over and above the minimum protection for workers. |
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Even the somewhat irritating absence of a comma in the title may have been meant to convey his constant rush from first light to dusk. |
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It seems that every word and every comma in every section has been litigated. |
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Separates fields with commas, and inserts quotation marks only around character fields that contain a comma or quotation mark. |
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The difference in the placement of a comma can change the legal meaning of a ruling. |
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Yes, simply separate each entry with a comma or click each contact in your contacts list to add them to the message. |
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Usually in case of decimal numbers, every three decimal digits are separated with a comma to make larger numbers easier to read. |
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If your regional settings are set to use a comma as a separator, the PostScript output will be more reliable. |
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A misplaced comma may be obscuring the meaning of this reference. |
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It was really quite strange how greatly a misplaced comma could anger him. |
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You could also think of the subordinating conjunction as a prepositional phrase, and you always need a comma after a prepositional phrase that starts a sentence. |
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You don't need to know the 17 reasons to insert a comma into a sentence. |
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Today the comma is a familiar sight in southern England and Wales. |
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It was more like punctuation, a real life comma that emphasizes the constant pressures of our daily schedule. |
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Did you know using the Oxford comma is simply a matter of personal taste? |
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A comma would be just plain wrong without a co-ordinating conjunction, the presence of which would have undermined the moral toughness of the sentence. |
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A kiss can be a comma, a question mark, or an exclamation point. |
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As it is separated from the other words in the list by a comma on either side, it is identified as a separate deduction from the selling prices of the inventory items. |
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These FANBOYS help create compound sentences, and when they serve this role, a comma comes before their use. |
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They are comma shaped and will acrobatically somersault when disturbed. |
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He once called a fellow director on Christmas Day to complain about a missing comma in a memo. But if his perfectionism bordered on pedantry, Warburg continued to inspire great loyalty. |
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Select decimal point or comma for use in numeric displays. |
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In process of time, the comma was added, which was then merely a perpendicular line, proportioned to the body of the letter. |
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Do not try to fix a squinting modifier by inserting a comma to make your readers pause. |
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A variant was introduced to English orthography around 1600, marking a pause intermediate between a comma and a period. |
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Thundersnow is possible within a cyclone's comma head and within lake effect precipitation bands. |
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The orange tip butterfly can be found amongst the aubrietia in late spring, while the comma and small tortoiseshell like sedum. |
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The comma is frequently used in C as a simple punctuation mark, to separate variable declarations, function arguments, etc. In certain situations, the comma acts as an operator. |
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Contrary to what some people say, there is no need to follow et ce or et cela with a comma as this creates a break where there is supposed to be continuity. |
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The comma should be used as decimal symbol. |
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One chapter is devoted to avoiding common mistakes such as dangling modifiers and comma splices. |
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And we're not just talking about finding misspellings or comma splices here. |
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After pleading guilty to conspiracy to vandalize government property — they had relocated a wayward apostrophe and inserted a comma — the young grammarians were barred from national parks for a year. |
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The Elements of Style instructs us to place a comma before a conjunction introducing an independent clause. |
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Even by having a comma in the wrong place you risk losing marks. |
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We give sufficient conditions to obtain left determined model structures on a full reflective subcategory, on a full coreflective subcategory and on a comma category. |
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But the Court's 5-to-4 ruling cited the second comma as evidence that the Framers intended the right to bear arms to apply not just to militias but to your Uncle Ted too. |
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The idea that split infinitives are not OK was invented by pretentious Britfags who had Latin molested into them when they were schoolboys, right along with the Oxford comma. |
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Editing the journal isn't all comma splices and color swatches. |
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In 2007, some traditional spellings were finally invalidated, whereas in 2008, on the other hand, many of the old comma rules were again put in force. |
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Hi there, just about half an hour or so ago I spotted a Comma butterfly basking on a rock in a woodland glade in the presence of some dragonflies. |
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According to Raymond Brown's Epistle of John, the source of the Comma Johanneum appears to be the Latin book Liber Apologeticus by Priscillian. |
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Many scholars and critics also believe that the Comma Johanneum reference supporting the Trinity doctrine in 1 John to have been a later addition. |
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