As for dashes and ellipsis, I think some writers use them more than others. My rule is that if I can possible get away with a comma or period, I do so. I only use those where I feel they are critical to the feel of that line, and that is somewhat rare for me.
I use dashes more, I noticed.
What I've heard for rules is that a dashes can replace commas in a parenthetical phrase. "Then he saw Maria--that old hag--walking down the street."
Or they can add emphasis. "Then he saw Maria--his nemesis!"
I think they also work for a change of voice. "Then he saw Maria--what the hell?" (In this case, both emphasis and a change of tone or voice.)
(My understanding is that in a manuscript there should be no spaces between them. To put spaces between is considered informal? Anyone know if that is right in a submitted manuscript?)
In most case, I think a comma can replace a dash. So that is why I adopted the rule of emphasis. If I really need a phrase to stand out, I'll use a dash.
Also, I've heard that dashes are used to indicate a break, where ellipsis are used to indicate trailing off.
So if something interrupts a speaker's dialogue, use a dash. If they just trail off into silence, use ellipsis.
That's about all I know about dashes and ellipsis. I put all this hear hoping someone who knows more will correct any flaws in my understanding
Poor punctuation is the sign of a novice and will keep an author in the slush pile, no matter how much we'd like to think otherwise. A little might make it through, but rampant misuse will turn an editor off. Most editors and slush readers have English degrees and seem to think they have to use that education.
Here's a good link on some tips on how to use these confusing punctuations correctly and for the most benefit. There's also some other interesting tips to be found here.
http://www.sff.net/odyssey/tips.html
[This message has been edited by luapc (edited July 31, 2007).]
Jayson Merryfield
i.e. "So I'm just supposed to wha... did you just see that big purple elephant?"
or something like that...
The internet is destroying punctuation, there is so much informal communication through; chat, email, messageboards, etc. That traditional proper punctuaion will probably not survive the next decade or so. I suspect you will see some radical changes in proper punctuation as the information age...er ages :-)
I also use semicolons more than the average person does, but because they're not as common as dashes I avoid them when (a) writing marketing copy and (b) when the diction of my text is relatively low. I also try to make sure that I don't use too many of them, since they're unusual enough to call attention to themselves, and that's exacerbated by repetition. I have no such compunctions with dashes.
I do a lot of things here I wouldn't do in straight writing, though. Parentheses are right out, for instance.
I haven't yet dived into my copies of the Seven Harry Potters, but I heard once that Rowling used rather a lot of capitalization---considered as "screaming at someone" when online posting, but might or might not play well in a book. You guys who've read it, you'd know better than me what Rowling's stylistic oddities are.
[edited to insert "not" between "reason" and "to try." It's been four days but I just couldn't let that stand.]
[This message has been edited by Robert Nowall (edited August 05, 2007).]
Commas are nice additions to the punctuation possibilities at a writer's disposal; however, they seem to be too low key for extended asides. As a reader, I have found that asides designated by commas are more confusing than asides using em-dashes or parentheses.
In mid-speech, however, I never use parentheses; any situation that calls for it usually seems to work better as a separate paragraph. I don't have the same problem with em-dashes, however, and I would agree that the ellipsis is perfect for when someone is trailing off or distracted.
[This message has been edited by Snorri Sturluson (edited August 01, 2007).]
I find em dashes less likely to break the overall flow of thought. Parentheses always make me feel like the writer is muttering under her breath. If I'm writing a long sentence, however -- and I probably write long sentences more often than I should, with extended clauses, asides, and even whole subsentences embedded within them -- I often want the ideas to have a similar weight, if you know what I mean. From "If I'm writing" through the em dash is one part of the argument, the section in the dashes is another, and they both have a similar weight, and both reinforce the final section ("I often want"). So "less obtrusive" might have been the wrong phrase to use, but maybe you see what I mean now.
Oh, yeah, and I often use parentheses like I just did.
What do other people think? Do you get a different impression from em dashes and parentheses?
This is how I read it anyways.
Jayson Merryfield
Dashes are more frequently (though by no means exlusively) featured in expositional sentences to allow for an interpolated thought.
Just FYI, I was re-reading the Belisarius series (by Eric Flint and David Drake) recently, and noticed that they follow the aforementioned pattern more often than not.
Exceptions usually involve a line of dialogue that simply requires a more abrupt ending (i.e. a dash) than an ellipsis can provide. Example:
quote:-From Fortune's Stroke, by Eric Flint and David Drake
"Not bad, actually. Once we brace the door—"
...Or, dialogue that features interpolating exposition:
quote:-From Fortune's Stroke, by Eric Flint and David Drake
Maurice summed it up. "Could be worse. Walls are thick. The stones were well placed. Roof'll be a problem, but at least"—he pointed to the rubble filling the northern third of the farmhouse—"when it collapsed it brought down the adjoining walls. One or two Rajputs could squeeze in there, but there's no way they could do a concerted rush."
In my opinion, it doesn't really matter which 'format' you use, as long as you stay consistent within your own work. It's when you start jumping all over the place with dashes, ellipses, and the like that readers begin to get annoyed.
Inkwell
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"The difference between a writer and someone who says they want to write is merely the width of a postage stamp."
-Anonymous
[This message has been edited by Inkwell (edited August 04, 2007).]