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And I wonder, did they have arguments about grammar when most people didn't write? It's harder to accuse someone of a run-on sentence when they're just speaking it. When did rules such as "each sentence must have a subject and a predicate" come about? We use "illegal" sentences all the time in casual speech, so it seems like that might've come after they'd worked out what a sentence is and how to separate it from its neighbours.
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The etymology of punctuation marks
WhitmanO'Neill 08/20/2003 8:58 PM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Jackie 08/21/2003 11:58 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
WhitmanO'Neill 08/22/2003 3:32 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Bean 08/22/2003 11:31 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Zed 08/22/2003 3:59 PM ![]()
Complex sentences
Father Steve 08/22/2003 4:33 PM ![]()
Re: Complex sentences
maverick 08/22/2003 10:02 PM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Bingley 08/25/2003 10:16 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Faldage 08/25/2003 10:26 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
Zed 08/26/2003 12:01 AM ![]()
Re: The etymology of punctuation marks
maverick 08/26/2003 12:08 AM
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