The Semicolon
I have grown fond of semicolons in recent years. . . . It is
almost always a greater pleasure to come across a semicolon than a period. The
period tells you that that is that; if you didn't get all the meaning you
wanted or expected, anyway you got all the writer intended to parcel out and
now you have to move along. But with a semicolon there you get a pleasant
little feeling of expectancy; there is more to come; read on; it will get
clearer.
Use a semicolon [ ; ]
·
to help sort out a monster list:
There were citizens from Bangor, Maine; Hartford, Connecticut; Boston, Massachusetts; and Newport, Rhode Island.
OR
We had four professors on our committee: Peter Wursthorn, Professor of Mathematics; Ronald Pepin, Professor of English; Cynthia Greenblatt, Professor of Education; and Nada Light, Professor of Nursing.
There were citizens from Bangor, Maine; Hartford, Connecticut; Boston, Massachusetts; and Newport, Rhode Island.
OR
We had four professors on our committee: Peter Wursthorn, Professor of Mathematics; Ronald Pepin, Professor of English; Cynthia Greenblatt, Professor of Education; and Nada Light, Professor of Nursing.
·
to separate closely related independent clauses:
My grandmother seldom goes to bed this early; she's afraid she'll miss out on something.
My grandmother seldom goes to bed this early; she's afraid she'll miss out on something.
The semicolon allows the writer to
imply a relationship between nicely balanced ideas without actually stating
that relationship. (Instead of saying because my grandmother is afraid she'll miss
out on something, we have implied the because. Thus the reader is involved in the
development of an idea—a clever, subliminal way of engaging the reader's
attention.)
It is rare, but certainly possible,
that you will want a semicolon to separate two independent clauses even when
those two independent clauses are connected by a coordinating conjunction. This is especially true when the
independent clauses are complex or lengthy and when there are commas within
those independent clauses. You might consider breaking those two independent
clauses into separate sentences when this happens.
.Coach Auriemma realized that his next
recruiting class contained two superb guards, a fine post player, and a power
forward; but as of the end of the spring recruiting season, he was still
pushing to discover better first-year players for the interior positions.
that's all about semicolon lesson.
that's all about semicolon lesson.
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