quote:Example?
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Wanted commas and other punctuation are often left out to minimize bumpy flow.
quote:I don't know how anyone could complain or say the comma should be replaced with a dash. Same for
His face was heavily wrinkled, savaged by time.
quote:But when a third item is added to the list, comma confusion is created:
His face was heavily wrinkled, savaged by time and four packs of menthols a day.
quote:This is no less grammatical than the previous sentences; there is no reason to suspect the author prefers a longer break between wrinkled and savaged.
His face was heavily wrinkled, savaged by time, four packs of menthols a day, and a poor diet.
quote:In my chapter called "Split Personality", I argue that the comma has two faces. One is what you said: separation. The comma physically separates, convention or no.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Commas number a hundred or so distinct functions, one in common: separation for clarity and read and comprehension ease.
quote:
I had a dream once, and in it were Hemingway and Dickens and Faulkner and Crichton and Evanovich and a few other authors I didn't recognize. In the dream, Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter had just been published, and they were reading it, marveling at the power and complexity of the grammar. They all agreed that, after hundreds of years of developing grammar, perfection had been reached.
But then Faulkner, I'm pretty sure, said what they were all thinking: "But it's really difficult to understand." And they all nodded. Hemingway said it best: "This grammar **** doesn't work." And then they all started discussing ways to write that would be more meaningful, but no one was listening to anyone else, and they were all talking at once, so I couldn't understand what anyone was saying. Then I woke up.
quote:It looks interesting and useful. (From the description: "What is the relationship between a matrix clause and a subordinate clause?")
Originally posted by Grumpy old guy:
If you are indeed interested in how and why grammar works, check out this book: Oxford Modern English Grammar by Bas Aarts.
It's about why we have certain 'rules' which guide how we write, and speak and the principles underpinning them. Technical as all get out.
Phil.
quote:I think: That happens for everything powerful. The standard form for simile is misused and diluted so much that one might avoid it when there's a good alternative. But sometimes it's the only way to go.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Period separated single words went fast from huh? to oh! to cliché due to overuse, misuse, dilution, and outworn triteness.
quote:Jan. 9 internet news
That. Is. Huge.
quote:Consider, rather than or in addition to a banal instructive creative composition grammar guide, a lampoon of grammar and language idiosyncrasies. Say, about how Millennials want to slaughter hidebound grammars and assert their own grammar laws? Satire that also subversively instructs?
Originally posted by EmmaSohan:
quote:I think: That happens for everything powerful. The standard form for simile is misused and diluted so much that one might avoid it when there's a good alternative. But sometimes it's the only way to go.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Period separated single words went fast from huh? to oh! to cliché due to overuse, misuse, dilution, and outworn triteness.
Adverbs have this problem. The interesting first sentence has this problem. The three word paragraph has this problem.
But we don't avoid all similes, adverbs, interesting first sentences, short paragraphs, and all-period sentences just because sometimes they have been overused and misused.
Because they can be powerful. And useful.
quote:Jan. 9 internet news
That. Is. Huge.
quote:I do that! Reproduced:
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Consider, rather than or in addition to a banal instructive creative composition grammar guide, a lampoon of grammar and language idiosyncrasies.
code:[i]ab[/i] Abbreviation fault (35) [i]mix[/i] Mixed construction (22a - b)
[i]ad[/i] Misused adjective, adverb (16) [i]mm[/i] Misplaced modifier (21a - g)
[i]agr[/i] Agreement error (15) [i]mng[/i] Meaning unclear
[i]ap[/i] Add apostrophe or misused (30) [i]no cap[/i] Unnecessary cap (33f)
[i]appr[/i] Inappropriate language (37) [i]no ,[/i] No comma needed (28)
[i]arg[/i] Argument faulty (8 - 9) [i]no ¶[/i] No new paragraph needed (4)
[i]awk[/i] Awkward construction [i]p[/i] Puncuation error (27 - 43)
[i]case[/i] Case error (13) [i]par or ¶[/i] Start new paragraph (4)
[i]cap[/i] Use capital letter (33) [i]¶ coh[/i] Paragraph incoherent (4c)
[i]cit[/i] Missed or citation error (44) [i]¶ dev[/i] Paragraph undeveloped (4d)
[i]coh[/i] Coherence lack (2c - 4, 4c) [i]¶ un[/i] Paragraph un-unified (4b)
[i]con[/i] Be more concise (39) [i]pass[/i] Passive voice fault (14j)
[i]coord[/i] Coordination fault (24a) [i]pn agr[/i] Prounon-antecedent err (15b)
[i]cs[/i] Comma splice (18a - b) [i]rep[/i] Unnecessary repetition (39c)
[i]d[/i] Ineffective diction (37 - 39) [i]rev[/i] Revise or proofread (3)
[i]des[/i] Document design fault (5) [i]shift[/i] Inconsistency (20)
[i]det[/i] Determiner use error (16h) [i]sp[/i] Misspelled word (40)
[i]dev[/i] Inadequate development (2, 4d) [i]sub[/i] Subordination fault (24b)
[i]div[/i] Incorrect word division (40d) [i]t[/i] Verb tense error (14g - h)
[i]dm[/i] Dangling modifier (21h) [i]t seq[/i] Verb sequence error (14b)
[i]eff[/i] Ineffective sentence (23 - 26) [i]trans[/i] Transition needed (4a,c - 6)
[i]emph[/i] Emphasis lacking or faulty (23) [i]und[/i] Underline (34)
[i]exact[/i] Inexact language (39) [i]usage[/i] See usage reference
[i]fp[/i] Faulty predication (22b) [i]var[/i] Vary sentence structure (26)
[i]frag[/i] Sentence fragment fault (17) [i]vb[/i] Verb form error (14a - f)
[i]fs[/i] Fused sentence (run-on) (18c) [i]vb agr[/i] Subject-verb agreement (15a)
[i]gram[/i] Grammar error (12 - 16) [i]w[/i] Wordy (39)
[i]hyph[/i] Hyphenation error (40d) [i]ww[/i] Wrong word (39)
[i]inc[/i] Incomplete construct (22c - e) [i]//[/i] Parallism fault (25)
[i]ital[/i] Use italics (34) [i]#[/i] Add space
[i]lc[/i] Use lowercase letter (33f) [i]X[/i] Obivious error
[i]log[/i] Faulty logic (8g, 8d) [i]^[/i] Something missing (22e)
[i]mech[/i] Mechanics error (33 - 36) [i]??[/i] Illegible or meaning unclear
quote:I don't advice against all adverbs is dangerous. In my modern grammar book, I tried to think up all of the reasons not to use adverbs. But when I was done, I still had times when they were fine. And other times when they had small flaws but seemed okay. Which explains why everyone uses them.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
However, strong and clear prose appeal favors few, if any, conjunctive adverbs; few, if any, -ly or otherwise adverbs or connective tissues, for that matter.
quote:Conjunctive adverbs!
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Tests of conjunctive adverb clauses (adverbial clause): Contains a conjunctive adverb and a verb; subject or implied subject optional. Also, a conjunctive adverb is location independent within a dependent adverbial clause. Otherwise, a conjunctive adverb or clause is location independent within an independent clause.
quote:Any grammar book should be able to handle that -- it's a primitive grammar. They don't, of course, and I am guessing The Little, Brown Handbook doesn't.
He stands up, looming, his large hand snapping forward, a quick slap across my cheek. It stings a lot, but it's just red skin, no bruising. The real pain is inside me, getting hit by my father. Him sluggish, me fast, I kick his shin as hard as I can. That's going to seriously bruise. I turn around, stomping away.
Frieda, bringing him a drink! Screaming at her, I shouldn't be angry at her, but "WHAT ARE YOU DOING?" Angrily yanking the drink from her hand, disgustedly throwing it on my father.
quote:Yep, I picked that because it was ungrammatical, according to those traditional grammar rules. Horribly ungrammatical, I hoped, and it was nice to get your analysis, it trashed the grammar much better than I could have. So we agree on that.
A compound predicate is simply two or more main verbs attached to a single subject of the sentence. Please note: When you join just two verbs, no comma should come before the and.
quote:And you mentioned a primitive grammar found in stream of consciousness. Did my passage follow the rules of that primitive grammar?
The grain that the rat that the cat that the dog chased worried ate lay in the house.
quote:This seems tortured. First, you cannot say that something, for example, uses synecdoche or hyperbole and therefore is grammatically correct. And it would be the same for diazeugma. (Which is a concept that spans languages.)
Originally posted by extrinsic:
//He stands up, looms.// Is a rhetoric figure of a subject governs more than one verb, same subject for implied subject sequential syntax units. The two syntax units otherwise prescriptively would be complete independent clauses or a prescriptive compound predicate sentence, and is based upon standard grammar principles, includes rhetoric's applications for effective expression. Grammar and rhetoric are each subsets and top classes of each other.
//He stands up; he looms.//
//He stands up and looms.//
//He stands up, and he looms.//
The figure: diazeugma, "The figure by which a single subject governs several verbs or verbal constructions (usually arranged in parallel fashion and expressing a similar idea); the opposite of zeugma." Diazeugma emphasizes similar, close-related ideas.
Example: "The Romans destroyed Numantia, razed Carthage, obliterated Corinth, overthrew Fregellae. —Ad Herennium" (Gideon Burton, Silva Rhetoricae, rhetoric.byu.edu)
quote:Been there, did that, was really excited to then discover a pattern to the "rule-breaking".
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Please abandon any idea a grammar is rule bound.
quote:Apt? Shouldn't everything be apt (including everything in formal writing)? Telling people to try to do good isn't really advice.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Prose wants apt, descriptive grammar; formal composition demands proscriptive and prescriptive grammar.
quote:Instead, we find principles. Like, if you want the reader to understand that a word is not being pronounced the way it normally would, you can change the spelling to indicate that.
WHAT ARE YOU DOOOOOING?" (King, Misery)
quote:Suppose King's book had been:
Originally posted by extrinsic:
Those are stage directions suited to and adopted from script conventions, emerged circa 1920 for "silent" captions and "talkie" screenplay script uses.
quote:The first thing I looked for was capitalizing a word like this.
Originally posted by extrinsic:
."
Little, Brown, 12th edition, describes English conventions, standards, and options, and observes distinctions among formal and informal composition, and casual conversation expression, updated as often as the publisher deems apt, often to extend content that reflects actual, current usage, though not updated every year.
quote:Brown, Little doesn't mention that, as far as I can see. I am looking at the 2010. So that's 50 years with no updating? Admittedly, something like that normally starts out as "experimental", but it's normal technique now.
Indeed, they were an endless Project that slowly evolved into a Unit, in which miles of construction paper and wax crayon were expended by the State of Alabama in its well-meaning but fruitless effort to teach me Group Dynamics. (To Kill a Mockingbird, 1960)