My recent departure from the land of semicolons (C/C++/Java) into the shangri-la of Ruby, has not depleted my fondness for the semicolon. Today, Ezra points to a NY Times article celebrating the oft-forgotten punctuation mark. As Ezra says "Best NYT story evr"
Semicolon sightings in the city are unusual, period, much less in exhortations drafted by committees of civil servants. In literature and journalism, not to mention in advertising, the semicolon has been largely jettisoned as a pretentious anachronism.
Americans, in particular, prefer shorter sentences without, as style books advise, that distinct division between statements that are closely related but require a separation more prolonged than a conjunction and more emphatic than a comma.
“When Hemingway killed himself he put a period at the end of his life,” Kurt Vonnegut once said. “Old age is more like a semicolon.”
In terms of punctuation, semicolons signal something New Yorkers rarely do. Frank McCourt, the writer and former English teacher at Stuyvesant High School, describes the semicolon as the yellow traffic light of a “New York sentence.” In response, most New Yorkers accelerate; they don’t pause to contemplate.
Even the correction at the bottom of the article is fun.









So good.
This sentence is for those who might have trouble finding the article.
Posted by: The Ez | 2008.02.21 at 01:06 PM
Oops! Sorry I forgot the link. Was in a rush to post and catch a bus :)
Posted by: Dav Yaginuma | 2008.02.21 at 02:15 PM