javasaurus (
javasaurus) wrote2007-03-28 04:37 pm
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A question of quotation marks...
If you end a written question with a quoted word or phrase, do you put the question mark before or after the quotation marks? If the question mark is part of the quoted material, it goes before the marks, otherwise it goes after. The same rule applies to exclamation points. However, with periods and commas, the mark *always* goes before the quotation marks. I don't know why, and I believe the rule is different (and more sensible) in England, but that's the rule for America. Who makes these rules, anyway?
Now for my question: I'm coauthor on a paper that will be published soon. We just got the proofs from the journal, and they put a period after the quotation marks. Should I correct it, or let it slide, hoping that this little "error" will help propogate change in American grammar?
Now for my question: I'm coauthor on a paper that will be published soon. We just got the proofs from the journal, and they put a period after the quotation marks. Should I correct it, or let it slide, hoping that this little "error" will help propogate change in American grammar?
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I believe the Chicago Tribune set the current style, if my memory recalls this conversation from some 16 years ago.
However, I just looked up "ACS Style", and what came up was Oxford U Press, which did the outside-the-quotes version. :)
Actually, here's an ACS summary:
I would note that in addition to that, the count of commas involved in a list is also subject to variation.
a, b and c
vs
a, b, and c
or the "oxford trailer":
a, b, and c,
I perfer the middle. leaving a comma out can presume that two items are associated, as in
a and (b and c)
which while mathematically is irrelevant, in english it can be deceptive in its connotation.
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Periods go outside quote marks, unless it's dialogue.
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