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Teresa

SoWal Guide
Staff member
Nov 15, 2004
30,893
9,500
South Walton, FL
sowal.com
National Punctuation Day was Friday Sept 24th. We forgot to celebrate.;-)


Sticklers Make A Point On National Punctuation Day

punctuation.jpg


Its National Punctuation Day! If that sentence made you cringe, then welcome to the fold. Its, it's. Your, you're. Why can't people get it right?

On Friday, Sept. 24, punctuation aficionados across the country celebrated the seventh annual National Punctuation Day. Last year's celebration featured a baking contest (here's the recipe for "Punctuation Meatloaf"), and this year, organizers kicked off a punctuation-inspired haiku challenge:

Em dash or en dash.
On typewriters it?s easy,
On keyboards, less so.


Jeff Rubin ? a veteran print journalist who reads The San Francisco Chronicle every morning with a red Sharpie in hand ? is the founder of National Punctuation Day. He talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about his crusade.

Text messaging, Rubin laments, is "not quite the end of civilization as we know it, but it's just one more step."

People ask Rubin all the time, "Who cares?" Judging from the overabundance of mispunctuated signs out there, it sometimes seems like nobody does. But Rubin also gets e-mails, "hundreds and hundreds of e-mails," he says, "from people who do care: teachers, attorneys, journalists, parents."
He says 60 percent of incoming freshmen in the Cal State University system are taking remedial English ? and "that's just not acceptable."

Defending punctuation isn't glamorous work, but Rubin says he "soldiers on." Below, he shares with us his greatest punctuation pet peeves:

1. People who misuse the apostrophe, Part 1: The rule about apostrophes is so simple: If it's plural there's no apostrophe. How hard is that? Other than the period, which tells people to STOP, this is the easiest punctuation mark. Will the "Johnson's" and "Smith's" of the world explain to me why this rule is so difficult to understand?

2. People who misuse the apostrophe, Part 2: What's the deal with "it's" and "its"? "It's" is a contraction, meaning "it is." "Its" is possessive. If people read their sentences by substituting "it is" for "it's" ? "it is condition was serious" ? it wouldn't make sense. That means "it's" is wrong.

3. People who make up their own punctuation style: At a business meeting the other day a guy who specializes in risk assessments said he likes to put commas and periods outside closing quotation marks. I told him that's not the recognized style of any of the major stylebooks in the United States. He told me he felt it was a "choice," not an absolute rule. That's like saying the Ten Commandments are the Ten Suggestions.

4. People who put commas where they don't belong: There are several correct ways to use a comma; an incorrect way is to add one just because it seems like the appropriate time. I know a writer who submits an occasional article for her company's newsletter. Her article always includes a misplaced comma. When I ask why the comma is where it is, I get this response: "Well, I hadn't used a comma in a while so I thought I should put one in." Where's the Maalox?

5. Their, there, and they're; your and you're: When did they stop teaching homophones in school?
NPR Sept 25, 2010

Do you have punctuation pet peeves?
 

scooterbug44

SoWal Expert
May 8, 2007
16,706
3,339
Sowal
IMO, nothing makes someone look stupider than a basic grammatical error. There are some tricky ones, but I am constantly amazed at what some people will screw up as they type, write, or post.

And if it's on Sowal, your argument loses all credibility if 3rd grade grammar is apparently too much for you to grasp. :roll:

There is a place. Their means they own it.

It's is the short version of "it is", its means ownership.

And since my ghetto phone (that flips open and can't access the internet) can do punctuation and capital letters, I know your I jesus can!
 
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AlphaCrab

Beach Fanatic
Sep 25, 2008
981
182
Inlet Beach
So to whom's are, you, actually directing this post, towards? Anyway. Its great, to see you're involvement, in this!
 

Teresa

SoWal Guide
Staff member
Nov 15, 2004
30,893
9,500
South Walton, FL
sowal.com
Texting, discussion forums, comments and reviews (restaurants, movies, etc) on apps, websites, etc... reading these posts daily is revealing. occasional errors or shortcuts don't bother me at all. we all do this. But now we are really seeing daily examples of our education system at work. We're not talking about just young people either.

At least people are communicating. Judging their work is not really all that important. It is revealing of many things pertaining to our society. But, I do not believe poor grammer/punctuation/spelling is any indication of character. Some younger folks may be motivated to do better in written skills since its so revealing, but some won't be so inclined.

Still, we all have our pet peeves!
 

Jdarg

SoWal Expert
Feb 15, 2005
18,039
1,984
#1

It seems to be getting more and more popular to break this rule.

I even a received a Christmas card this year signed "Merry Christmas from the Smith's". They even went to the trouble to have it printed.
 

Teresa

SoWal Guide
Staff member
Nov 15, 2004
30,893
9,500
South Walton, FL
sowal.com
#1

It seems to be getting more and more popular to break this rule.

I even a received a Christmas card this year signed "Merry Christmas from the Smith's". They even went to the trouble to have it printed.

its SO common. I do this when trying to say omb's, just to put that separation in there. you might not know what ombs are. or you might. or maybe I should just say OMBs.
 
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