beck123 wrote:Could you link us all to that book on punctuation, please?
http://www.amazon.com/Eats-Shoots-Leave ... 303&sr=8-1
beck123 wrote:Could you link us all to that book on punctuation, please?

That is one sheep with 'tude, dude.beck123 wrote:The sheep's for you, Luke, but don't expect it to have a life expectancy measured in years.




beck123 wrote:
The apostrophe becomes a problem when the next, logical steps are taken with the new construction. If seen as a contraction, then a phrase like "Here are y'all's tickets" begins to accumulate too many apostrophes for our simple language. Using the phrase as a free-standing possessive pronoun, it reads "Here are yalls tickets," where "yall" is the root pronoun and "yalls" the possessive form in parallel with "her" and "hers," "their" and "theirs." And yet in this form, it seems to lack a needed apostrophe.
beck123 wrote: As I wrote elsewhere in the forum, my opinion is that we shouldn't be writing in this (or any) dialect, anyway; but people do, so I suppose it needs to be addressed.
With all the technology available, dialects should be
disappearing - TV, radio, etc. : we can hear each other
and speak to each other. This should ultimately
eliminate the Boston "drawl", southern stuff, midwestern
whatever.






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