robert ames
robert ames
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Inevitably it will happen. Not inevitably it always happems.
And the difference is?
dictionarys are really useful books.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Inevitably it will happen. Not inevitably it always happems.
And the difference is?
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Really? You can't tell the difference between something that will inevitably happen, sooner or later, and something that will always happen every time? If so, we should give it up. In any case, my original claim stsnds. Using commas when one feels there ought to be a pause will lead to unnecessary ambiguity, maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life, even if not for every sentence you write during the rest of your life.
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
You guys are plainly talking past each other. It stems (sorry to say it Jonathan) from the ambiguous sentence : “f you place commas to indicate verbal pauses, you will inevitably create ambiguity in sentences that don't need to be there.“
This could be read as a statement about each sentence that uses a comma to indicate a pause (likely unintended meaning) or that the practice will ultimately but not necessarily in each instance lead to a sentence that is ambiguous (likely intended meaning).
Jonathan, you really should be more careful.![]()
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
You guys are plainly talking past each other. It stems (sorry to say it Jonathan) from the ambiguous sentence : “f you place commas to indicate verbal pauses, you will inevitably create ambiguity in sentences that don't need to be there.“
This could be read as a statement about each sentence that uses a comma to indicate a pause (likely unintended meaning) or that the practice will ultimately but not necessarily in each instance lead to a sentence that is ambiguous (likely intended meaning).
Jonathan, you really should be more careful.![]()
Stipulating for the moment that the sentence can be read that way (and I find the construction strained), we had clearly worked out my intended meaning and Oswaldo, in his last post, was objecting to that one.
What shocks and appalls me as I reread the sentence is the verb "don't," which can only be the verb for the subject "sentences" and not for the intended subject "ambiguity." That conjugation error creates a truly bizarre sentence that you, Oswaldo, and anyone else, have full right to give me endless shit for. People making pendantic points about commas really should be able to conjugate their verbs.
The Politburo must be very unhappy. Or asleep?originally posted by kirk wallace:
And is that the first emoji in WD history??
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
The Politburo must be very unhappy. Or asleep?originally posted by kirk wallace:
And is that the first emoji in WD history??
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
The Politburo must be very unhappy. Or asleep?originally posted by kirk wallace:
And is that the first emoji in WD history??
originally posted by politburo:
Public statements are still monitored.
originally posted by Jayson Cohen: Apologist has been co-opted through the natural evolution of language (and to the dismay of linguistic conservatives) to meet the wine geek need, just as (I believe) I am co-opting the word co-opt in this sentence as compared to its traditional usage.
... There are thousands of individual rules for proper grammatical use of any given language; mostly, these are created, and then taught, in order to maximize understanding and minimize confusion. But the English language prohibition against “preposition stranding”—ending a sentence with a preposition like with, at, or of—is not like this. It is a fantastically stupid rule that when followed often has the effect of mangling a sentence. And yet for hundreds of years, schoolchildren have been taught to create disastrously awkward sentences like “With whom did you go?”
The origins of this rule date back to one guy you may have heard of. Of whom you may have heard. Whatever. His name was John Dryden.
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Is it anyone's opinion that having the word “subsequent” pronounced as “sub-see-quent” becoming some kind of standard?
. . . . Pete
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Is it anyone's opinion that having the word “subsequent” pronounced as “sub-see-quent” becoming some kind of standard?
. . . . Pete
No !
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
That's hardly something that Texans would embrace.
. . . . Pete