Jayson Cohen
Jayson Cohen
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
No confusion. Whitman punctuates consistently beautifully, with Oxford commas.
FIFY
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
No confusion. Whitman punctuates consistently beautifully, with Oxford commas.
Pish. Dictionaries have always reported usage as well as denotation. That entry is prefaced by "in effect:" which is a common disclaimer.originally posted by Jay Miller:
Excuse me. I have to go hide under the covers now.
Have you never seen Batman?originally posted by Cole Kendall:
Last night I heard the BBC call Wuhan the epicenter (or maybe epicentre, I wasn't listening closely) of the virus. Did the bats live underneath the city? I thought bats lived above us, not below.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Have you never seen Batman?originally posted by Cole Kendall:
Last night I heard the BBC call Wuhan the epicenter (or maybe epicentre, I wasn't listening closely) of the virus. Did the bats live underneath the city? I thought bats lived above us, not below.
My experience is that bats live in caves. A cave has a roof so it is not typically on the surface -- as an epicenter is -- but it does not have to be far below it.originally posted by Cole Kendall:
Last night I heard the BBC call Wuhan the epicenter (or maybe epicentre, I wasn't listening closely) of the virus. Did the bats live underneath the city? I thought bats lived above us, not below.
originally posted by robert ames:
i know that this is far from a new topic here.
nonetheless, i must say that i find the elimination of the oxford comma to be completely bewildering. ink is cheep. anything that can be done to improve readability should be practiced and lauded.
example: "the pub offered stout, porter, bitter, india pale ale, wheat beer, black and tan, and lager."
take out the oxford comma and a person may have to read the sentence more than once to get it right.
style should never be more important than readability. we write to communicate, not so that text will have a certain look.
originally posted by Lee Short:
While that's true, Eric -- sensible writers and editors seem to be in short supply, because I've read many, many sentences where the ambiguity was present. So I'll continue to maintain that including the comma is the only sensible guideline.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
It's not really ambiguity that's the issue - the meaning is almost never actually unclear without the comma. It's just that the second, unintended meaning sometimes forces you to do a distracting double-take, even while it's clear what the intended meaning is. The better argument for the comma is simply that it helps the mind insert the proper split-second pause in the text that would be there if a person were reading the text aloud.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
It's not really ambiguity that's the issue - the meaning is almost never actually unclear without the comma. It's just that the second, unintended meaning sometimes forces you to do a distracting double-take, even while it's clear what the intended meaning is. The better argument for the comma is simply that it helps the mind insert the proper split-second pause in the text that would be there if a person were reading the text aloud.
While I'm all for the Oxford comma, I'm equally against the control freak comma that seeks to determine when the reader must pause (that gives me pause).