Constructive Criticism Thread
Moderators: Celeste Stewart, Ed
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Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Antonia expressed what I couldn't on the topic.
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Celeste, great link. Thanks.
Antonia, thanks for taking the trouble to explain things to me. Yes, the article is about learning to stand up for oneself and maintain boundaries. I understand now about the title. Still, after reading what you've said, I wonder if you will confirm the following for me, please?
Currently, in the text, I've written sentences like this: '... ways to learn to say, “No” and ...'
Following from what you guys say, I assume it's permissible to write this: ' ... ways to learn to say no and ...'
Thanks.
Avantika
Antonia, thanks for taking the trouble to explain things to me. Yes, the article is about learning to stand up for oneself and maintain boundaries. I understand now about the title. Still, after reading what you've said, I wonder if you will confirm the following for me, please?
Currently, in the text, I've written sentences like this: '... ways to learn to say, “No” and ...'
Following from what you guys say, I assume it's permissible to write this: ' ... ways to learn to say no and ...'
Thanks.
Avantika
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Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
In this case, if you use quotes, you do not need the comma before the quotes. If it were dialog, yes, you'd need a comma as in:ways to learn to say, “No” and
"Do you want coffee?" Joe asked.
Betty said, "No."
But no comma is needed here:
Ways to say "no" include putting your hand up, stop-sign style. . .
And without the quotes:
Ways to say no include putting your hand up, stop-sign style. . .
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Hi Celeste,
Thank you very much for answering these queries. The examples provided really help.
A
Thank you very much for answering these queries. The examples provided really help.
A
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Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Glad to help.
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Great news! That article that I posted a question about on the previous page was just accepted---WAHOO! Thanks for your help!
Now this is a quick question about hyphens (something that has always confused me)...
I am writing about "iron rich foods" and I was wondering if it should be "iron-rich foods" instead. I've looked up the rules about hyphens on grammarbook.com, but I am still a little foggy about this case. Thank you!
Now this is a quick question about hyphens (something that has always confused me)...
I am writing about "iron rich foods" and I was wondering if it should be "iron-rich foods" instead. I've looked up the rules about hyphens on grammarbook.com, but I am still a little foggy about this case. Thank you!
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Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Cool!
I want to say that you hyphenate when the words modify a noun - as in: "Iron-rich foods are good for you." But not when they don't as in: "Are those vegetables iron rich?"
Here's what OWL (Online Writing Lab) Purdue has to say on the subject:
I want to say that you hyphenate when the words modify a noun - as in: "Iron-rich foods are good for you." But not when they don't as in: "Are those vegetables iron rich?"
Here's what OWL (Online Writing Lab) Purdue has to say on the subject:
1.Use a hyphen to join two or more words serving as a single adjective before a noun:
a one-way street
chocolate-covered peanuts
well-known author
However, when compound modifiers come after a noun, they are not hyphenated:
The peanuts were chocolate covered.
The author was well known.
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
You do want the hyphen in "iron-rich foods." Generally, whenever you have a compound term before a noun, you include the hyphen.
The point is often to avoid ambiguity. For example: "Letitia marveled at the two tailed monkeys" vs. "Letitia marveled at the two-tailed monkeys." The first sentence is ok if there were two monkeys with tails, but the hyphen in the second sentence makes it clear the writer is referring to monkeys with two tails.
Compounds containing adverbs ending in "ly" such as "slowly moving cars" or "nearly finished projects" don't take hyphens because the meaning is rarely ambiguous. On the other hand, "The slow moving cars made me cry" would need a hyphen ("slow-moving cars") unless you were referring to the slow cars that got you all choked up.
You could probably argue that "iron rich foods" isn't ambiguous, but you won't go wrong using a hyphen and making the meaning crystal clear.
Hope this isn't more confusing than helpful!
The point is often to avoid ambiguity. For example: "Letitia marveled at the two tailed monkeys" vs. "Letitia marveled at the two-tailed monkeys." The first sentence is ok if there were two monkeys with tails, but the hyphen in the second sentence makes it clear the writer is referring to monkeys with two tails.
Compounds containing adverbs ending in "ly" such as "slowly moving cars" or "nearly finished projects" don't take hyphens because the meaning is rarely ambiguous. On the other hand, "The slow moving cars made me cry" would need a hyphen ("slow-moving cars") unless you were referring to the slow cars that got you all choked up.
You could probably argue that "iron rich foods" isn't ambiguous, but you won't go wrong using a hyphen and making the meaning crystal clear.
Hope this isn't more confusing than helpful!
Last edited by 4rumid on Wed May 12, 2010 10:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Didn't see you there Celeste!
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Thank you, Celeste and 4rumid! Those examples really helped and thanks for the OWL resource as well!
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Hi Celeste/Antonia,
Thought I'd let you know that the article that I posted a question about - Learning to Say No - was just accepted. Thanks for your help!
Avantika
Thought I'd let you know that the article that I posted a question about - Learning to Say No - was just accepted. Thanks for your help!
Avantika
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Awesome!
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Glad to hear it! Good luck with the next one
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it's me again
Here's a quick question that has me stumped. I am now writing about renters insurance, and I'm not sure whether to use an apostrophe or not (make it "renter's insurance"). Most insurance companies and places on the web do not use an apostrophe, however, since it is insurance owned by the renter I feel like it needs one. What do you guys think? Thank you!
Here's a quick question that has me stumped. I am now writing about renters insurance, and I'm not sure whether to use an apostrophe or not (make it "renter's insurance"). Most insurance companies and places on the web do not use an apostrophe, however, since it is insurance owned by the renter I feel like it needs one. What do you guys think? Thank you!
Re: Constructive Criticism Thread
Prudential, Geico, and AllState all use the term "renters insurance" without the apostrophe. They also use "homeowners" and not "homeowner's" insurance. It doesn't seem grammatically correct but I suppose it's considered industry jargon so can be spelled that way?