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Dot dash dot!

One of the surprise bestsellers of Christmas 2003 in Britain was Eats, Shoots and Leaves by Lynn Truss. The book’s title was taken from a joke about a panda walking into a café. The panda eats a sandwich, fires a gun in the air and walks towards the door. When the waiter asks in confusion what he thinks he’s doing, the panda throws him a badly punctuated book on wildlife: “Panda. Large black-and-white bear-like mammal, native to China. Eats, shoots and leaves”. The author is showing how incorrect punctuation can cause misunderstanding or confusion. The purpose of punctuation is to make the meaning as clear as possible.

Full-stop

It comes at the end of complete sentences. A comma is not strong enough. It cannot come at the end of a dependent clause standing by itself: If the outstanding amount is not paid. is incorrect.

In general, punctuation with abbreviations is omitted nowadays.

Question mark

Fairly obvious—but remember that a reported question is no longer a question, has statement subject-verb word-order, and therefore takes no question mark: ‘Are you going to London next week?’ > The Chairman asked if I was going to London the following week.

Semi-colon

This is the least understood punctuation mark. It is much closer to a full-stop than to a comma, and can never be substituted for a comma. Sometimes there is a choice between full-stop and semi-colon. A semi-colon is used:

Comma

Some people like plenty of commas—others don't! You have considerable freedom in the use of commas outside the important rules given here:

Colon

Two useful rules:

Dash

A useful but hard-to-define mark.  It can be used to:

Quotation marks (inverted commas)

That said all publications will have their own house style, so take all of the above as guidelines,:; rather than hard and fast rules.

Guy Perring is Director, Professional Development Unit (PDU), at the British Council Malaysia. The PDU offers a wide range of learning opportunities from management and communication skills training to developing English skills. Contact the British Council in Kuala Lumpur at T: 03 - 2723 7900 or Penang at T: 04 - 263 0330 or visit www.britishcouncil.org.my.

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