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9 Reviews
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Candy said on Jan 17, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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1 person find this helpful




I have the seventh sense
Funny! I am one of these people who have a horrible compulsion to edit typos and punctuation and it's actually a relief to hear someone write about it. I am not alone. And wait, I DO have a life, and I HAVE relaxed about correcting people ... lest they get offended.
I did have a few issues with the ... (continue)
guiltlessreader aka screamingbanshee said on Dec 13, 2009 | Add your feedback
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1 person find this helpful




I'm not quite sure what this says about me, but I found this book about punctuation rather amusing and enjoyable. I think you have to be what I've affectionately heard called a "grammar guru" to appreciate this book: someone who routinely finds (and gets frustrated) with punctuation, spelling, and ... (continue)
Bashful said on Nov 11, 2008 | Add your feedback
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Ely-Baby said on May 31, 2012 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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After being the only one who noticed apostrophes being put in the wrong places all the time, after asking everyone I could why, after being told there was nothing wrong (with the apostrophes, I mean, since there was probably something wrong with me)... after all of these things, I found this ... (continue)
l'aura said on May 1, 2011 about the Paperback edition | Add your feedback
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I must confess I haven't finished this book yet, and I probably won't go on.
I found it very funny and interesting at the beginning, since it carries some fundamental information about English language (e.g. the use of apostrophe for the plural form of acronyms). I particularly appreciated the descr ... (continue)Lilacwhisper said on Feb 25, 2011 | Add your feedback
Book Details
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Rating:




(136)
- English Books
- Hardcover 176 Pages
- Edition: Ill
- ISBN-10: 1592403913
- ISBN-13: 9781592403912
- Publisher: Gotham
- Pub date: Oct 16, 2008
- Also available as: Paperback, Audio CD, Others and eBook
- In other languages: other languages
Groups with this in collection
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9781592403912 | Hardcover | $25.00 | $21.37 | bn.com |
| $25.00 | $15.99 | The Book Depository | ||
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 3 copies tradable: 1 in USA → | ||||
1 person find this helpful
So unimaginable that punctuation can make up such a long book. The author had carried out extensive research on this topic and there were loads of reference in it.
The analogies and jokes on punctuation did bring about a lot of fun,
and yet the vocabularies were a bit too much for me!
P ... (continue)
So unimaginable that punctuation can make up such a long book. The author had carried out extensive research on this topic and there were loads of reference in it.
The analogies and jokes on punctuation did bring about a lot of fun,
and yet the vocabularies were a bit too much for me!
Punctuation marks are somewhat useful and essential: they either do with the syntax or notate the music of the spoken language.
"Punctuate the following puzzler: Charles the First walked and talked half an hour after his head was cut off"
"The Law of Conservation of Apostrophes: For every apostrophe omitted from an it's, there is an extra one put into an its"
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Apostrophe
1. indicate a possessive on a singular noun
2. indicate time or quantity
3. indicate the omission of figures in dates
4. indicate the omission of letters
5. indicate strange, non-standard English
6. feature in Irish names such as O'Neil
7. indicate the plural of letters eg. f's
8. indicate plurals of words eg. do's
Comma
1. for lists
2. for joining
3. for filling gaps eg Annie had dark hair; Sally, fair
4. before direct speech
5. setting off interjection
6. commas that come in pairs
Bracket
to add information, to clarify, to explain, to illustrate
Square bracket
1. an editor's way of clarifying the meaning of a direct quote without actually changing any of the words
2. used around the word sic eg "please send a copy of The Time's [sic]", he wrote.
Ellipsis
1. indicate words missing
2. trail off in an intriguing manner
Hyphen
1. avoid ambiguities eg re-mark
2. spelling outnumbers
3. linking nouns with nouns
4. noun phrase to qualify another noun eg stainless-steel kitchen
5. certain prefixes
6. to spell out words
7. avoid unpleasant linguistic condition eg deice (de-ice)
8. indicate a word is unfinished and continues on the next line
9. hesitation and stammering
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