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Coördination and the Comma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2020

Extract

Those who consider punctuation ‘largely a matter of taste’ and look upon the so-called ‘sentence-sense’ as a kind of sixth sense that comes only from generations of gentle breeding, will regard with small favor the attempt to formulate any very definite principles governing the structure of the sentence; but those who have little faith in the subjective conclusions of capricious taste will welcome any systematic presentation of facts that may enable them to settle points of disputed usage for themselves. It is with this conviction that I offer the following contribution to the study of the sentence, not without hope that it may incite others to a more thoro investigation of related problems of English usage.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1908

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References

page 316 note 1 Frederic Harrison, Early Victorian Literature, p. 167.

page 316 note 2 Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre.

page 317 note 1 Arnold, God and the Bible.

page 318 note 1 Meredith, The Egoist.

page 318 note 2 Carlyle, The French Revolution.

page 318 note 3 Newman, Idea of a University.

page 324 note 1 The colon, which is used more rarely, has of course the same structural significance as the semicolon.