![]() ![]() Luckily the trend in the 20th century (starting with H. Commas, if you don't whistle at them to calm down, are unstoppably enthusiastic at this job. As we shall shortly see, the comma has so many jobs as a 'separator' (punctuation marks are traditionally either 'separators' or 'terminators') that it tears about on the hillside of language, endlessly organising words into sensible groups and making them stay put: sorting and dividing circling and herding and of course darting off with a peremptory 'woof' to round up any wayward subordinate clause that makes a futile bolt for semantic freedom. “So what happened to the comma in this process? Well, between the 16th century and the present day, it became a kind of scary grammatical sheepdog. ![]()
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