I thought blah blah blah, and I was right. Is the comma correct?





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}






up vote
23
down vote

favorite
4












This sentence is bugging me:




I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking, and I was right.




The comma doesn't seem to be enough, but the semicolon just looks wrong:




I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right.




Which of the above is correct and why?










share|improve this question






























    up vote
    23
    down vote

    favorite
    4












    This sentence is bugging me:




    I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking, and I was right.




    The comma doesn't seem to be enough, but the semicolon just looks wrong:




    I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right.




    Which of the above is correct and why?










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
      23
      down vote

      favorite
      4









      up vote
      23
      down vote

      favorite
      4






      4





      This sentence is bugging me:




      I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking, and I was right.




      The comma doesn't seem to be enough, but the semicolon just looks wrong:




      I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right.




      Which of the above is correct and why?










      share|improve this question















      This sentence is bugging me:




      I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking, and I was right.




      The comma doesn't seem to be enough, but the semicolon just looks wrong:




      I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right.




      Which of the above is correct and why?







      punctuation commas semicolon






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 13 '14 at 1:40









      Lyndon White

      1,57921625




      1,57921625










      asked Jan 12 '14 at 22:26









      Jolenealaska

      1,38621130




      1,38621130






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          40
          down vote



          accepted










          The comma is enough as the second clause "I was right" is independent.



          Commas are used before conjunctions (but, and, yet, or, so, etc.) when the two clauses they are coordinating can stand as independent sentences.



          The semicolon is used when the first clause contains commas.




          I knew going in that the orange, marzipan and chilli flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right!







          share|improve this answer



















          • 8




            Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
            – TimLymington
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:40










          • The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
            – Michael Owen Sartin
            Jan 13 '14 at 0:38










          • I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
            – Johnston
            Jan 13 '14 at 2:15










          • Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
            – UncleZeiv
            Jan 13 '14 at 10:22


















          up vote
          15
          down vote













          They are both right. As is




          I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking. And I was right.




          Your examples are both compound sentences. There are two independent clauses, joined by a conjunction (and) and separated by punctuation (either the comma or the semicolon). The comma is a softer break, the semicolon, a more significant one.



          My example uses two separate sentences. This is an even more significant break and is somewhat more dramatic. A few purist would argue that sentences should not begin with a conjunction, but that viewpoint is probably not very ascendant today. Or do you disagree?



          [Perhaps I should have begun this entire discussion with They are both right, as is ...? Or maybe They are both right; as is ...?]






          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:25










          • This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
            – Evgeni Sergeev
            Jan 13 '14 at 11:50


















          up vote
          9
          down vote













          A comma seems fine. A quick look at google books shows that commas are common here, though sometimes there’s no punctuation at all.



          enter image description here



          I found one case of parentheses, but not a single semicolon.



          The Economist’s advice on semicolons is to use them:




          to mark a pause longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop. Don't overdo them.




          So, it’s seems that a comma is fine in your example.






          share|improve this answer





















          • I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:08










          • I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
            – JFA
            Jan 13 '14 at 17:43










          • @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 2:33






          • 1




            @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
            – jeremy
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:11










          • @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:29


















          up vote
          2
          down vote













          Yes it is correct, and here is why.



          You have two independent clauses in that sentence, and that means they must be: A) separated with a period. This is because they can stand alone as two separate sentences, 2) joined with a semicolon; do not use a conjunction, 3) joined with a comma and a conjunction, and they can be written as one sentence.



          Which of these you choose depends on the style of your writing.






          share|improve this answer























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            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes








            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            40
            down vote



            accepted










            The comma is enough as the second clause "I was right" is independent.



            Commas are used before conjunctions (but, and, yet, or, so, etc.) when the two clauses they are coordinating can stand as independent sentences.



            The semicolon is used when the first clause contains commas.




            I knew going in that the orange, marzipan and chilli flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right!







            share|improve this answer



















            • 8




              Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
              – TimLymington
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:40










            • The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
              – Michael Owen Sartin
              Jan 13 '14 at 0:38










            • I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
              – Johnston
              Jan 13 '14 at 2:15










            • Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
              – UncleZeiv
              Jan 13 '14 at 10:22















            up vote
            40
            down vote



            accepted










            The comma is enough as the second clause "I was right" is independent.



            Commas are used before conjunctions (but, and, yet, or, so, etc.) when the two clauses they are coordinating can stand as independent sentences.



            The semicolon is used when the first clause contains commas.




            I knew going in that the orange, marzipan and chilli flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right!







            share|improve this answer



















            • 8




              Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
              – TimLymington
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:40










            • The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
              – Michael Owen Sartin
              Jan 13 '14 at 0:38










            • I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
              – Johnston
              Jan 13 '14 at 2:15










            • Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
              – UncleZeiv
              Jan 13 '14 at 10:22













            up vote
            40
            down vote



            accepted







            up vote
            40
            down vote



            accepted






            The comma is enough as the second clause "I was right" is independent.



            Commas are used before conjunctions (but, and, yet, or, so, etc.) when the two clauses they are coordinating can stand as independent sentences.



            The semicolon is used when the first clause contains commas.




            I knew going in that the orange, marzipan and chilli flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right!







            share|improve this answer














            The comma is enough as the second clause "I was right" is independent.



            Commas are used before conjunctions (but, and, yet, or, so, etc.) when the two clauses they are coordinating can stand as independent sentences.



            The semicolon is used when the first clause contains commas.




            I knew going in that the orange, marzipan and chilli flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; and I was right!








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 24 mins ago









            Laurel

            29.2k654104




            29.2k654104










            answered Jan 12 '14 at 22:48









            Nomic

            659610




            659610








            • 8




              Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
              – TimLymington
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:40










            • The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
              – Michael Owen Sartin
              Jan 13 '14 at 0:38










            • I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
              – Johnston
              Jan 13 '14 at 2:15










            • Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
              – UncleZeiv
              Jan 13 '14 at 10:22














            • 8




              Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
              – TimLymington
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:40










            • The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
              – Michael Owen Sartin
              Jan 13 '14 at 0:38










            • I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
              – Johnston
              Jan 13 '14 at 2:15










            • Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
              – UncleZeiv
              Jan 13 '14 at 10:22








            8




            8




            Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
            – TimLymington
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:40




            Agreed: I would say that in OPs example using both a semicolon and 'and' is actually misuse, but it's a very minor point. (Either would be better than both).
            – TimLymington
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:40












            The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
            – Michael Owen Sartin
            Jan 13 '14 at 0:38




            The semicolon is used a comma would be confusing. My siblings were born in Atlanta, Georgia; Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Los Angeles, California. It serves as a kind of super-comma. More importantly, it is used to joint two independent clauses where there is no conjunction. You could say, "I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking; I was right." I'd agree that this particular use of the semicolon is "pretentious." The semicolon is a wonderful punctuation mark; however, it is a mark that ought to be used judiciously.
            – Michael Owen Sartin
            Jan 13 '14 at 0:38












            I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
            – Johnston
            Jan 13 '14 at 2:15




            I will always remember: so, and, but, or, yet, for, nor
            – Johnston
            Jan 13 '14 at 2:15












            Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
            – UncleZeiv
            Jan 13 '14 at 10:22




            Interestingly, in Italian you are usually taught not to use the comma at all in a case like this, precisely because you are using a conjunction that coordinates two independent sentences. The rationale is that you are just trying to reproduce the pause you make when you speak the sentence, so in other words it would be appropriate when writing direct speech, but not in a more formal setting.
            – UncleZeiv
            Jan 13 '14 at 10:22












            up vote
            15
            down vote













            They are both right. As is




            I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking. And I was right.




            Your examples are both compound sentences. There are two independent clauses, joined by a conjunction (and) and separated by punctuation (either the comma or the semicolon). The comma is a softer break, the semicolon, a more significant one.



            My example uses two separate sentences. This is an even more significant break and is somewhat more dramatic. A few purist would argue that sentences should not begin with a conjunction, but that viewpoint is probably not very ascendant today. Or do you disagree?



            [Perhaps I should have begun this entire discussion with They are both right, as is ...? Or maybe They are both right; as is ...?]






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:25










            • This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
              – Evgeni Sergeev
              Jan 13 '14 at 11:50















            up vote
            15
            down vote













            They are both right. As is




            I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking. And I was right.




            Your examples are both compound sentences. There are two independent clauses, joined by a conjunction (and) and separated by punctuation (either the comma or the semicolon). The comma is a softer break, the semicolon, a more significant one.



            My example uses two separate sentences. This is an even more significant break and is somewhat more dramatic. A few purist would argue that sentences should not begin with a conjunction, but that viewpoint is probably not very ascendant today. Or do you disagree?



            [Perhaps I should have begun this entire discussion with They are both right, as is ...? Or maybe They are both right; as is ...?]






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:25










            • This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
              – Evgeni Sergeev
              Jan 13 '14 at 11:50













            up vote
            15
            down vote










            up vote
            15
            down vote









            They are both right. As is




            I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking. And I was right.




            Your examples are both compound sentences. There are two independent clauses, joined by a conjunction (and) and separated by punctuation (either the comma or the semicolon). The comma is a softer break, the semicolon, a more significant one.



            My example uses two separate sentences. This is an even more significant break and is somewhat more dramatic. A few purist would argue that sentences should not begin with a conjunction, but that viewpoint is probably not very ascendant today. Or do you disagree?



            [Perhaps I should have begun this entire discussion with They are both right, as is ...? Or maybe They are both right; as is ...?]






            share|improve this answer














            They are both right. As is




            I knew going in that the orange flavor component of the cake was going to be lacking. And I was right.




            Your examples are both compound sentences. There are two independent clauses, joined by a conjunction (and) and separated by punctuation (either the comma or the semicolon). The comma is a softer break, the semicolon, a more significant one.



            My example uses two separate sentences. This is an even more significant break and is somewhat more dramatic. A few purist would argue that sentences should not begin with a conjunction, but that viewpoint is probably not very ascendant today. Or do you disagree?



            [Perhaps I should have begun this entire discussion with They are both right, as is ...? Or maybe They are both right; as is ...?]







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jan 12 '14 at 23:37

























            answered Jan 12 '14 at 22:47









            bib

            68.4k8100212




            68.4k8100212








            • 2




              Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:25










            • This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
              – Evgeni Sergeev
              Jan 13 '14 at 11:50














            • 2




              Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:25










            • This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
              – Evgeni Sergeev
              Jan 13 '14 at 11:50








            2




            2




            Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:25




            Ha! You bring up a good point regarding starting a sentence with a conjunction, it's kind of like ending a sentence with a preposition. "This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:25












            This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
            – Evgeni Sergeev
            Jan 13 '14 at 11:50




            This usage of 'And' isn't a conjunction. A conjunction is something that joins two clauses, while this is an 'And' at the beginning of the sentence. Now let the purists rave.
            – Evgeni Sergeev
            Jan 13 '14 at 11:50










            up vote
            9
            down vote













            A comma seems fine. A quick look at google books shows that commas are common here, though sometimes there’s no punctuation at all.



            enter image description here



            I found one case of parentheses, but not a single semicolon.



            The Economist’s advice on semicolons is to use them:




            to mark a pause longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop. Don't overdo them.




            So, it’s seems that a comma is fine in your example.






            share|improve this answer





















            • I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:08










            • I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
              – JFA
              Jan 13 '14 at 17:43










            • @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 2:33






            • 1




              @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
              – jeremy
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:11










            • @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:29















            up vote
            9
            down vote













            A comma seems fine. A quick look at google books shows that commas are common here, though sometimes there’s no punctuation at all.



            enter image description here



            I found one case of parentheses, but not a single semicolon.



            The Economist’s advice on semicolons is to use them:




            to mark a pause longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop. Don't overdo them.




            So, it’s seems that a comma is fine in your example.






            share|improve this answer





















            • I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:08










            • I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
              – JFA
              Jan 13 '14 at 17:43










            • @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 2:33






            • 1




              @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
              – jeremy
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:11










            • @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:29













            up vote
            9
            down vote










            up vote
            9
            down vote









            A comma seems fine. A quick look at google books shows that commas are common here, though sometimes there’s no punctuation at all.



            enter image description here



            I found one case of parentheses, but not a single semicolon.



            The Economist’s advice on semicolons is to use them:




            to mark a pause longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop. Don't overdo them.




            So, it’s seems that a comma is fine in your example.






            share|improve this answer












            A comma seems fine. A quick look at google books shows that commas are common here, though sometimes there’s no punctuation at all.



            enter image description here



            I found one case of parentheses, but not a single semicolon.



            The Economist’s advice on semicolons is to use them:




            to mark a pause longer than a comma and shorter than a full stop. Don't overdo them.




            So, it’s seems that a comma is fine in your example.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jan 12 '14 at 22:43









            Daniel Harbour

            5,3241221




            5,3241221












            • I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:08










            • I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
              – JFA
              Jan 13 '14 at 17:43










            • @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 2:33






            • 1




              @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
              – jeremy
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:11










            • @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:29


















            • I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
              – Jolenealaska
              Jan 12 '14 at 23:08










            • I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
              – JFA
              Jan 13 '14 at 17:43










            • @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 2:33






            • 1




              @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
              – jeremy
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:11










            • @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
              – Daniel Harbour
              Jan 14 '14 at 3:29
















            I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:08




            I particularly like the "don't overdo them". There is something oddly pretentious about the semicolon.
            – Jolenealaska
            Jan 12 '14 at 23:08












            I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
            – JFA
            Jan 13 '14 at 17:43




            I think your first example has a syntax error rather than a stylistic preference.
            – JFA
            Jan 13 '14 at 17:43












            @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 2:33




            @JFA: Do you want to add some more detail: what's the nature of the syntactic error?
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 2:33




            1




            1




            @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
            – jeremy
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:11




            @DanielHarbour Independent clauses need to be separated by commas. "I just knew it." and "I was right." can stand independently.
            – jeremy
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:11












            @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:29




            @Jeremy. That's a convention you can choose to follow if you like. I note that several writers who I regard as great stylists (e.g., Atwood) do so only sometimes. But I would certainly regard this comma rule as a matter of style, not one of syntax. As a jobbing linguist, I regard syntax as being about why you have to say John often eats fish rather that John eats often fish. Maybe you place the division between grammar and style elsewhere.
            – Daniel Harbour
            Jan 14 '14 at 3:29










            up vote
            2
            down vote













            Yes it is correct, and here is why.



            You have two independent clauses in that sentence, and that means they must be: A) separated with a period. This is because they can stand alone as two separate sentences, 2) joined with a semicolon; do not use a conjunction, 3) joined with a comma and a conjunction, and they can be written as one sentence.



            Which of these you choose depends on the style of your writing.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              2
              down vote













              Yes it is correct, and here is why.



              You have two independent clauses in that sentence, and that means they must be: A) separated with a period. This is because they can stand alone as two separate sentences, 2) joined with a semicolon; do not use a conjunction, 3) joined with a comma and a conjunction, and they can be written as one sentence.



              Which of these you choose depends on the style of your writing.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                2
                down vote










                up vote
                2
                down vote









                Yes it is correct, and here is why.



                You have two independent clauses in that sentence, and that means they must be: A) separated with a period. This is because they can stand alone as two separate sentences, 2) joined with a semicolon; do not use a conjunction, 3) joined with a comma and a conjunction, and they can be written as one sentence.



                Which of these you choose depends on the style of your writing.






                share|improve this answer














                Yes it is correct, and here is why.



                You have two independent clauses in that sentence, and that means they must be: A) separated with a period. This is because they can stand alone as two separate sentences, 2) joined with a semicolon; do not use a conjunction, 3) joined with a comma and a conjunction, and they can be written as one sentence.



                Which of these you choose depends on the style of your writing.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Jan 27 '14 at 20:40

























                answered Jan 13 '14 at 17:42









                JFA

                1,031920




                1,031920






























                     

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