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Punctuation

Ellipsis’ Mom Called!

She said to stop abusing her kid!

Terry L. Cooper

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Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay

Dots. Dots. Dots for as far as the eye can see……….Nope.

From good old Grammarly:

Those little dots often found in a sentence or quote are called an ellipsis. The term ellipsis comes from the Greek word meaning ‘omission,’ and that’s just what it does: an ellipsis shows that something has been left out. You can use an ellipsis when you’re quoting someone to show that you’ve omitted some of their words. For example:

“I wore my new silver, strapless, floor-length, silk dress and matching shoes.” could be shortened with an ellipsis to read: “I wore my new… dress and matching shoes.”

You can also use an ellipsis to show a pause in speech or the ‘trailing off’ of a sentence. You should only use the ellipsis this way in informal writing, however. For example:

“Andrew, can you, um… never mind, I forgot what I was saying.” “So, do you think we should…?”

Gotta love Grammarly. I use the free version and I use the paid version of ProWritingAid-Premium. They’re two siblings that usually get along. Every so often one will say to hyphenate a word and the other one will say no. Typical.

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