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Caroline Taggart

The Accidental Apostrophe

Sunday Times bestselling author Caroline Taggart brings her usual gently humorous approach to punctuation, pointing out what really matters and what doesn’t.
In Roman times, blocks of text were commonly written just as blocks without even wordspacingnevermindpunctuation to help the reader to interpret them. Orators using such texts as notes for a speech would prepare carefully so that they were familiar with the content and didn’t come a cropper over a confusion between, say, therapists and the rapists. As we entered the Christian era and sacred texts were widely read (by priests if not by the rest of us), it became ever more important to remove any likelihood of misinterpretation. To a potential murderer or adulterer, for example, there is a world of difference between ‘If you are tempted, yield not, resisting the urge to commit a sin’ and ‘If you are tempted, yield, not resisting the urge to commit a sin’. And the only surface difference is the positioning of a comma.
So yes, you SMS-addicts and ‘let it all hang out’ Sixties children, punctuation does matter. And, contrary to what people who tear their hair out over apostrophes believe, it is there to help — to clarify meaning, to convey emphasis, to indicate that you are asking a question or quoting someone else’s words. It also comes in handy for telling your reader when to pause for breath.
Caroline Taggart, who has made a name for herself expounding on the subjects of grammar, usage and words generally (and who for decades made her living putting in the commas in other people’s work), takes her usual gently humorous approach to punctuation. She points out what matters and what doesn’t; why using six exclamation marks where one will do is perfectly OK in a text but will lose you marks at school; why hang glider pilots in training really need a hyphen; and how throwing in the odd semicolon will impress your friends. Sometimes opinionated but never dogmatic, she is an ideal guide to the (perceived) minefield that is punctuation.
By the same author:
9781843176572 My Grammar and I (Or Should That Be 'Me'?)
9781782432944 500 Words you Should Know
140 páginas impresas
Propietario de los derechos de autor
Michael O'Mara Books
Publicación original
2017
Año de publicación
2017
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Citas

  • Nataliacompartió una citahace 3 años
    It was a Greek librarian called Aristophanes (not the playwright), working in the great library of Alexandria in the third century BC, who introduced dots between phrases, to help the reader know where to pause.
  • Дмитрий Кувшиновcompartió una citahace 6 años
    I’m inclined to think it’s something in between and would go with St Augustine – ‘use any method you choose’.
  • Дмитрий Кувшиновcompartió una citahace 6 años
    short prepositions such as to, at, on, in. Capitalize any that are four letters or more, such as over, under, behind, along, through. (Many pundits say five letters or more, but most versions of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest break this rule, so I’m going for four.)

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