Thanks, Hortensia, for your welcome post.
I had forgotten about that title and look forward to reading it.
With gratitude,
CoCo
by compound complex 102 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse
Thanks, Hortensia, for your welcome post.
I had forgotten about that title and look forward to reading it.
With gratitude,
CoCo
CoCo!!!
Good to see you again, my friend!!
Have a cuppa "Earl Joe" - or is that "Earl Grey" - on me!!
Hee hee!
And now to post "on-topic" on this thread...
My punctuation is all over the map - I tend to over-use hyphens and triple-dot periods...
Thanks, Ziddy!
Always a pleasure!
In reply to another poster, I did research and learned about em dashes (--) and why they do not always come out correctly (formatting software, I believe). Learned, too, about justified margins and the ragged right ... [ellipses; notice the spacing when using 3 dots]
WOW! Always learning.... [ellipses directly follow the last letter when there are 4]
CHEERS!
CoCo
I only recently learned how to use ellipses correctly -- it's period space period space period. If the three periods occur at the end of a sentence it's typed this way: . . .., no space behind the final elliptical period and the period that ends the sentence.
I can see that in most informal communication this doesn't matter a lot. But it matters to editors, and if you write for pay, you pay attention to what the editors want.
Thanks, Heaven and Hortensia.
Much appreciated! I've been researching ellipsis for the last hour, Hortensia. So much to ponder. I use THE NEW YORKER as a guide and I see both methods used. Consistency within an article is what counts. I've been using the term "ellipses" (plural) when I should have used "ellipsis" (singular). In one primer I noted that a sentence broken off was rendered thus:
We had a good time but Mary seemed preoccupied. ... [the first point being the period, the latter three denoting the omission]
CoCo is learning
However, when we are writing dialogue, an ellipsis can come in handy, especially if we want to show a character’s speech trailing off. Keep in mind, though, that ellipses, like exclamation points, should be used with caution and only when truly needed for emphasis. As a general rule, don’t use it unless you must.
Notation and Formatting
You’ll see ellipses formatted in two ways, either three points without spacing (…) or three points with spacing ( . . . ). In some cases, four points are used, but this is rare and not covered in this article.
In the U.S., an ellipsis is generally formatted with spacing between each ellipsis point: ( . . . ) per the most common style standards.
http://www.writingforward.com/grammar/punctuation-marks/punctuation-marks-ellipsis
He read the sign he felt the rage
something was missing on the page
those little marks so sweet and small
why someone had forgot them all
his heart began to flutter some
it's his puncuation equilibrium
OOPS punctuation
Bring back the semi-colon I say !