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• #1177
This was a note from my daughter's teacher đ
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• #1178
Just off Chiswick High St.
I hope it is related to Bada Bing (Sopranos)
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• #1179
Seen in a shop last week: 'All Producks Offer'
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• #1180
Guardian sub-editing:
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• #1181
last opportunity to see the "comet of the century", before it disappears for another 80,000 years
there'll be another 799 of them along within 80,000 years
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• #1182
That fucking cap annoys me almost as much as the UK filth wearing two tone union flags with the thin blue line. It's all a bit "Stolen Valour" to me.
That's regardless of the erroneous apostrophe. -
• #1183
The apostrophe is actually roneous
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• #1184
There's no erroneous apostrophe--I posted it because it was about fixing things and the headline needed fixing (but in another way).
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• #1185
Grammissimo.
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• #1186
This is an appropriate thread to ask you about the double dashes you use - -
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• #1187
En dash?
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• #1188
An attempt at simulating an Em dash. Not perfect. I've looked up the code for an Em dash many times before, but I keep forgetting it.
Just looked it up again: U+2014
https://www.toptal.com/designers/htmlarrows/punctuation/em-dash/
On Linux: Ctrl-Shift (held down) U2014
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• #1189
Not to be used to separate parentheses. Apparently used like this:
* in date ranges, such as 1849â1863,
* to join two names in a phrase, such as the MichelsonâMorley experiment,
* in multi-part prefixes, such as "postâWorld War II", although for those, either a hyphen or an en dash can be used; British publications use hyphens, and American publications use en dashes.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hyphens_and_dashes
I've never seen the point of those. For me, the En dash isn't sufficiently distinct from a shorter hyphen.
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• #1190
Ah yeah â I like that you can hold down the dash on an iPhone
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• #1191
Let us look at this again. You're correct.
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• #1192
Itâs a hot topic among copy editors â in the US more than the UK.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/14/style/em-dash-punctuation.html
To my ear, it has more of a dramatic beat to it than an en dash. Its slightly longer diving board lends a pause somewhere between a regular dash (en) and an ellipsis.
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• #1193
All this in an article which places spaces either side of the Em dashes ... :)
I think Em dashes are typographically much preferable. No spaces, please.
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• #1194
I've never seen the point of those. For me, the En dash isn't sufficiently distinct from a shorter hyphen
Hyphens in most typefaces should be a bit shorter to be honest, as they often were in traditional typefaces. They're only ever used within words, rather than between ideas, so they do kinda serve a distinct purpose, but type designers for more modernist/humanist typefaces seem to disagree.
Ranges do also look a little nicer with en dashes too (e.g. 12thâ23rd vs. 12th-23rd), especially in more traditional fonts like Baskerville
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• #1195
In reply to @Oliver Schick
The NYT and New Yorker style guides are bonkers ("coöperate", "D.J.-ing" for example), but this is all about personal taste imho. The more style guides I've read, the more I've realised they're just conventions, dictated more or less high-handedly depending on the author/publication.
I prefer no space if an em dash is after interrupted speech, it's between two dates, measures etc, or it's being used to balance out two mirrored clauses (man proposesâGod disposes), but I prefer a bit of space when it's occupying a similar function to a regular dash.
Yikes. Really didn't realise I had such depth of feeling about em dashes.
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• #1196
coöperate
That's great though, we could do with more diacritical marks in english
I prefer no space if an em dash is [âŠ] between two dates, measures etc, or it's being used to balance out two mirrored clauses (man proposesâGod disposes)
Noöo! between dates/measures is en dashesâbetween clauses is em dashes đ
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• #1197
I see your point, but I think the difference here is made by the heavier line weight rather than by the length.
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• #1198
between dates/measures is en dashes
I agreë!
I'm saying that if an em dash has to be used to separate dates, I think it doesn't benefit from having spaces either side of it.
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• #1199
In reply to @Oliver Schick
The NYT and New Yorker style guides are bonkers ("coöperate", "D.J.-ing" for example), but this is all about personal taste imho.
I don't know. There are just various ways of separating non-diphthong vowels. A trema to my mind should only be used for different vowels, e.g. HaĂŻti. Another problem with it is that it has different functions in different languages, e.g. in German it's *not* separate from the letters A, O, and U in Ă, Ă, and Ăâthese are whole letters, or "Umlaute"âthe diaresis is not the Umlaut/'umlaut', that's the whole letter. The hyphen in co-operate etc. is therefore a much better option. (I generally think that for most English compound nouns, which in English are generally not drawn together, hyphens are the preferred way of indicating the unity of the noun. Exceptions apply, but for clarity I think that's the best way.)
The more style guides I've read, the more I've realised they're just conventions, dictated more or less high-handedly depending on the author/publication.
I haven't read too many, but found plenty to disagree with in every single one I've seen. It's a terribly confused situation in German since the ridiculous spelling 'reform', which has left generations adrift.
I prefer no space if an em dash is after interrupted speech, it's between two dates, measures etc, or it's being used to balance out two mirrored clauses (man proposesâGod disposes), but I prefer a bit of space when it's occupying a similar function to a regular dash.
Isn't that's an En dash you've put there?
Yikes. Really didn't realise I had such depth of feeling about em dashes.
Why not, if you're professionally concerned with them (as I guess you are)? (It should always be 'En dashes' and 'Em dashes'.)
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• #1200
I agreë!
$â Þà ¥â , âÂĄÄĄÄ„â â©â Ï.
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