IsaacTolkien
Experienced
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2019
- Posts
- 35
Suppose a character is speaking slowly and hesitantly. Should he say:
Apparently the Chicago Manual of Style advises #5. I see this in magazines like the New Yorker, though it seems to work better with serif fonts.
The Harry Potter books, in the UK at least, use #4.
My natural instinct while typing is to do #1 or #2, but most writers' web sites advise some version of #3-5.
What makes sense?
- "I-I don't know where he is."
- "I - I don't know where he is."
- "I...I don't know where he is."
- "I ... I don't know where he is."
- "I . . . I don't know where he is."
Apparently the Chicago Manual of Style advises #5. I see this in magazines like the New Yorker, though it seems to work better with serif fonts.
The Harry Potter books, in the UK at least, use #4.
My natural instinct while typing is to do #1 or #2, but most writers' web sites advise some version of #3-5.
What makes sense?