So I thought I'd start a thread to entice in the pedants! It always annoys me when people use double question marks, ESPECIALLY when they're for a statement that doesn't even need one. I always got the impression it makes the person asking the question (when it actually IS a question) look really pompous.
Know what I mean??
Anyway, what punctuation irritation do other metropollers get? Difficulty: No interrobangs.
Punctuation infuriation
For the following reasons: They are seen as slightly geeky; and many people do not know how to correctly use them.marksi wrote:Why don't people use colons or semi-colons any more?
Most people use them for emoticons/smileys.

The New Malpass.
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There's no hyphen in semicolon, apparently.marksi wrote:Why don't people use colons or semi-colons any more?
I use them a lot.
However, I do see many people starting a sentence with but or and very often. Grammatical it's obviously incorrect but are they colloquially correct?Nini wrote:But or and should never start a sentence and things cannot be simply good as it's a non-committal word or so my English teacher told me.
correction: grammatically. shame on me.
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Welcome to the forum eanokeanok wrote:However, I do see many people starting a sentence with but or and very often. Grammatical it's obviously incorrect but are they colloquially correct?Nini wrote:But or and should never start a sentence and things cannot be simply good as it's a non-committal word or so my English teacher told me.
correction: grammatically. shame on me.

Colloquially you're as right as long as your audience understands your message but grammatically it's apparently a big no-no and that teacher struck the fear of Satan/JM into my soul so I don't really want to fall foul of it even though I'm certain she's been dead for a decade at least.eanok wrote:Grammatical it's obviously incorrect but are they colloquially correct?
Oh and welcome, it's great to have you with us. That avatar might need to be redone though.
From the Lynch Guide to Grammar and Style:
My experience is that grammar and style are things which evolve very quickly, given how much the rules have changed since I was at school. Perhaps the explosion of email and text messaging are to blame for a large part of that.
I was taught to indent paragraphs. When was the last time you saw one?Contrary to what your high school English teacher told you, there's no reason not to begin a sentence with but or and; in fact, these words often make a sentence more forceful and graceful. They are almost always better than beginning with however or additionally. Beginning with but or and does make your writing less formal; — but worse things could happen to most writing than becoming less formal.
Note, though, that if you open with but or and, you usually don't need a comma: not "But, we did it anyway"; it's enough to say "But we did it anyway." The only time you need a comma after a sentence-opening conjunction is when you want to sneak a clause right between the conjunction and the rest of the sentence: "But, as you know, we did it anyway." [Entry revised 12 July 2005.]
My experience is that grammar and style are things which evolve very quickly, given how much the rules have changed since I was at school. Perhaps the explosion of email and text messaging are to blame for a large part of that.