My new favorite punctuation mark: the dash
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JUNE CASAGRANDE
A few weeks ago, a reporter here wanted to know why copy editors kept
changing her semicolon to a colon.
Deirdre Newman had written, “Parking is the main concern; Rutter
favored an alternative with 375 spaces.”
What came out in print, however, was a colon in space of the
semicolon.
“I still think a semicolon is better -- maybe I’m wrong,” Deirdre
wrote in a newsroom e-mail. “But if not, I think a period would have
been better, not a colon.”
In no time, a harmless question had spiraled into a
blind-leading-the-blind verbal and e-mail melee as people like me
volunteered half-baked guesses. I don’t remember what the point of my
pontification was, but I know that it added further confusion by also
weighing the role of the dash.
So if the greatest minds at the modern-day Athens known as the
Daily Pilot can’t handle this one, how is the average business writer
to know what to choose when faced with the choice of colon,
semicolon, dash, period or comma?
The first and most important thing to know -- which took us half a
day to figure out -- is that there’s a lot of room for choice here.
Much of the issue has to do with what you meant to say and how you
meant to say it.
For example, Deirdre was using the semicolon because she felt it
separated two distinct but equally weighted thoughts. This is one
correct use of the semicolon.
Per the Associated Press Style guide: “In general, use the
semicolon to indicate a greater separation of thought and information
than a comma can convey, but less than the separation that a period
implies.”
Here’s a guideline I once learned: The semicolon should come
between two phrases that can stand on their own as complete
sentences.
Semicolons can also be used to manage unwieldy lists. Think of
them as uber commas.
“She leaves behind a son, Mike Jones of Miami; two daughters,
Laura Smith of New York and Elizabeth Aaronson of Pittsburgh; and a
brother, James, of Carson City, Nev.”
What kind of a mess would that sentence be without the semicolon?
Let us all gasp in terrified awe of this mighty power.
So was Deirdre right? Sure. Was the guy who corrected her wrong?
Nope. He was right, too. Here’s why:
Besides its most common use for introducing lists, the colon is
often used to add emphasis. Quoth the AP Style Guide: “The colon can
often be effective in giving emphasis: ‘He had only one hobby:
eating.’”
The copy editor felt that the second thought in Deirdre’s quote
was the umph set up by the first part. Therefore the colon added
emphasis to the more heavily weighted thought.
Also fine.
Me, I’m a dash person. A dash is basically two hyphens, though
lots of word processing programs automatic meld the hyphens together
into one long line.
I had no idea why I was so fond of the dash until I double-checked
my book just now and read, “Abrupt change: Use dashes to denote an
abrupt change in thought in a sentence or an emphatic pause: We will
fly to Paris in June -- if I get a raise.”
As someone whose brain operates in bizarre fits and starts, I now
understand why I gravitate toward this punctuation mark. From this
day forward I will think of it as a sort of schizophrenic semicolon
and my close friend.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at june.casagrande
@latimes.com.
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