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Accidental Apostrophe: ... And Other Misadventures in Punctuation

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In Roman times, blocks of text were written without even wordspacingnevermindpunctuation. Orators would prepare carefully so that they didn’t get confused between, say, therapists and the rapists. As we entered the Christian era, it became ever more important to remove any likelihood of misinterpretation. 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, punctuation does matter, and 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. Caroline Taggart points out what matters and what doesn’t; why using six exclamation marks where one will do is fine in a text but not 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, this is an ideal guide to the (perceived) minefield that is punctuation.

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£3.99
Product Details
Michael O'Mara
1782438211 / 9781782438212
eBook (EPUB)
428.23
19/10/2017
GB
English
1 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%