What the hell is a Grammar Anarchist? You can be one! Since we don’t have a U.S. language, feel FREE to set your own rules -- interpret grammar YOUR WAY. You’re not in England anymore. Join the anarchy of U.S. grammar! Make your choices and preserve them in YOUR STYLE MANUAL. —The Grammar Anarchist
Contact the Grammar Anarchist with your questions about grammar and language at grammaranarchist@gmail.com
Get a personal reply at Val@valdumond.com
Get a personal reply at Val@valdumond.com
Friday, June 3, 2011
Do you believe "all punctuation belongs inside quotation marks"?
The Anarchist loves to overthrow this "rule". While you may follow blindly, if you wish, there are choices. When the last word of a phrase or sentence is not part of dialog, The Anarchist places the punctuation outside. Look again at the title and the first sentence!
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2 comments:
"Yes," I believe "everything" belongs in "quotation marks" because "punctuation" is "underrated"!!!
Elle, When a quoted word is not part of dialog, or falls at the end of a sentence, place the punctuation outside the quote marks. That's a guideline, not a "rule". Be careful about dissing punctuation -- it's what directs the reader -- to pause, stop, question, talk and listen, and understand.
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