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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/11211-Punctuation-Part-2.html
Drama: February 23, 2022 Issue [#11211]




 This week: Punctuation, Part 2!
  Edited by: Lilith of House Martell
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

This week we will talk a little bit about the disingenuous dash!
Not to be confused with the hyphen or minus sign.




Word from our sponsor

ASIN: 197380364X
Amazon's Price: $ 15.99


Letter from the editor

The "dash" is not a solo artist, it's more of a quartet where each member wears the same suit but plays a different instrument.

The 'en dash':
The en dash is used as a substitute for the word "to" in numerical ranges or relationships (1939-1945, Paris-Roubaix Bicycle Race); acts as kind of a superhyphen to connect compound terms {pre-World War) and is occasionally used to hide offensive letters or sensitive w - - ds by hiding individual letters.

The 'em dash':
Used singly, the em dash indicates an instance of aposiopesis, an abrupt change or end to a thought or speech ("What the —?"); doubled up, em dashes sensor entire portions of w——s. To further complicate matters, en and em dashes sometimes means the same thing!

American style guides advocate using unspaced emdashes to set apart parenthetical clauses—like this—whereas most British texts prefer a space before and after the dash.

The 'quotation dash':
An exotic little creature, the 'quotation dash', used by some authors to denote spoken dialogue. Slightly longer than the em dash, a quotation dash is used to introduce each new line of dialogue.

The 'figure dash':
This dash is used to divide strings of numbers, such as phone numbers (555-1234), that do not represent ranges.

Clues to the genesis of the dash, in any of its forms, are elusive. First, and most surprising, the dash and the hyphen seem to have absolutely nothing in common except for their visual appearance.

Is it any wonder we're all so confused?




Editor's Picks

Need a laugh?
BOOK
Smile! (Groan?) You Know You Love These!  (ASR)
Want to smile at least once a day? Then read these! Okay, maybe you'll groan some too...
#2177903 by Sum1


Exercises to improve your writing, overcome writer's block, or just practice.
FORUM
A Writing Exercise  (18+)
If you want to improve your story writing, overcome writer's block or just practice
#2219764 by A E Willcox


 
STATIC
Dangling Modifiers & Sentence Asymmetry  (13+)
The grammatical pitfalls of starting sentences with -ing words & ambiguous sentences.
#2258819 by A E Willcox


Written by our resident Comma-Queen, Winnie Kay
 The Misunderstood Comma  (E)
Written by Winnie Kay
#2133471 by Lilith of House Martell


Written by Mary T (Ravalyn)
 When to use Accept vs Except  (E)
By Mary Ravalyn
#2133442 by Lilith of House Martell



 
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Word from Writing.Com

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Ask & Answer

From "Drama Newsletter (January 26, 2022)
eyestar~* wrote:
How fascinating! I had no idea. Thanks for sharing such unique information. *Smile*

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