Why We Punctuate; or, Reason Versus Rule in the Use of Marks
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About This Book
A practical manual that argues punctuation should follow sense relations between word groups rather than isolated arbitrary rules. The writer reconstructs conventional instruction by treating marks in relation—showing how commas, semicolons, colons, and periods interact—critiques existing style manuals and handbooks, and provides rewritten examples and illustrative sentences to demonstrate when marks are interchangeable or determinative of meaning. Emphasis is on reasoning about punctuation choices, logical grouping, and the reader’s comprehension, with attention to common inconsistencies and proposed principles to guide clearer punctuation.
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