Greetings Storytellers, Diana here with another riveting post on punctuation. We’re getting close to wrapping this series up! This one is “dense”—not in the thick-headed sense—but…| Story Empire
The period [.] is the most common punctuation mark in the English Language. Also called the full stop, its use is universal and makes clear to a reader that they have reached the end of| GRAMMARIST
You have likely seen dates are written out in various ways (i.e., date-month-year format vs. month-date-year format) and have wondered about these differences. Depending where you live determines which format you follow, although, for stylistic| GRAMMARIST
The Oxford comma is a punctuation mark whose use is hotly debated among certain English language writers, reporters, teachers, and academics. The use, or lack thereof, of the Oxford comma may cause confusion, depending on| GRAMMARIST
Learn the key punctuation differences in UK English vs. US English – from titles and quotation marks to colons, acronyms, and Latin terms.| Knowadays
The comma is used more than any other punctuation in writing. Because of this, there are many misinterpretations of where a comma belongs, rule misuses, and myths provided by poor teaching practices. No, you do| GRAMMARIST
Greetings Storytellers, Diana’s back again with another smokin’ post on the hot topic of punctuation, specifically—the apostrophe! This one’s fairly straightforward . . . though, as usual, I’ve a f…| Story Empire
Greetings, Storytellers! Diana here for Part III of our punctuation review. So far we’ve covered the colon and its neighbor, the semicolon. Now I plan to dazzle you with dashes! G…| Story Empire
Typography mistakes can undermine your brand's credibility. Learn how to properly use dashes, quotation marks, and other punctuation to enhance professionalism and elevate your business communications.| Visible Logic
Greetings, Storytellers! Diana here for Part II of punctuation. Last month, I had you on the edge of your seats as we reviewed the impactful colon. Since it’s related, I thought we’d ju…| Story Empire
How that simple dot at the end of the sentence became something you use to tell people you're mad. Right. Now.| The New Republic
A guaranteed speed breaker when I enter a new school year, and meet a new batch of students with renewed enthusiasm is old errors. Do it enough over the years, and you might begin to realize that p…| moving writers
Stacy L. Christiansen, MA, Managing Editor, JAMA After infection with SARS-CoV-2, some people develop long-term effects. This condition has been termed post-COVID conditions (PCCs), post-COVID synd…| AMA Style Insider