KeithD
Virgin
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2012
- Posts
- 29,626
I may be old, but I still have all my adult teeth. We can continue when yours come through.
Is there an English translation available for that?
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I may be old, but I still have all my adult teeth. We can continue when yours come through.
So, this sentence:
“On your knees bitch, and start sucking.”
Grammarly wants the comma. Word sez no way. Nothing required.
What say you?
Either for me - would depend on the emphasis wanted and the cadence of the sentences around it. I'd probably tend to go no comma, though, if I thought about it too much.So, this sentence:
“On your knees bitch, and start sucking.”
Grammarly wants the comma. Word sez no way. Nothing required.
What say you?
So, this sentence:
“On your knees bitch, and start sucking.”
What say you?
Actually, thinking about it, I tend to agree this ^^^^. Even more to the point, maybe:I say if you have a comma after bitch, you need one before it, too.
Actually I'd push for one before bitch, and consider an exclamation mark or full stop after. And then a sentence fragment starting with And.
The 'bitch' needs to be separated off from the 'get on your knees and start sucking', where a comma before 'and' would be optional.
I say if you have a comma after bitch, you need one before it, too.
Actually I'd push for one before bitch, and consider an exclamation mark or full stop after. And then a sentence fragment starting with And.
The 'bitch' needs to be separated off from the 'get on your knees and start sucking', where a comma before 'and' would be optional.
I say if you have a comma after bitch, you need one before it, too.
Yeah, I agree. I was only looking at the comma that was there, in terms of the clauses, and I missed the missing one to set off the direct address.
As far as the comma that was pointed to, the OP was asking how to properly punctuate a rendering that was what he wanted to write, not to provide someone else's alternative on how to write it. There's nothing wrong with putting it all in one sentence. Giving alternate wording isn't responding to the question.
Foot, mouth, insert. You have a bad habit.
Say aloud the words:
'lets + eat + grandma' Do you hear any apostrophes, commas or capitalisations. No, because they're not properties of grammar. The sentence is perfectly comprehensible without them, disambiguation is by context. Are you addressing grandma, or your sibs and/or first cousins?
The typographical marks on the written word are "Style'.
Write out 100 times
'It's interesting to me to see the continual hostility that so many writers at Literotica have toward a publisher's style.'
If you're not going to use a publisher, why should you conform to their style? To appease the style trolls?
Writing is a creative process. In the 21st C anyone can publish. They can use stylistic markings creatively, or leave them out where they serve no purpose. A better, more elastic, more inclusive style will probably emerge, that serves the needs of the screen, rather than paper.
Join the future.
Agree this (and thanks for your enjoyable long post). It's the point many of us constantly make, in response to those who (just as constantly) say good grammar doesn't matter - there are conventions for a reason, the main reason being, they work.You've got to put in the time and work to build your chops. Otherwise, just keep striving for mediocrity.
Not unless Bitch is her actual name - it's not a conventional title like Sir, or Mister.So my solution is this:
"On your knees, Bitch! Start sucking."
The angry tenor of the dialogue seems to demand an emphasis on Bitch. Plus I believe as a direct address it should be capitalized. Like "On your knees, Susan! Start sucking." Sorry, you wouldn't have known about the tenor of the dialogue preceding it. My bad.
Not unless Bitch is her actual name - it's not a conventional title like Sir, or Mister.
The exclamation mark provides the emphasis on its own, I think.
Yep, this. If you really wanted to add emphasis you could capitalise the WHOLE WORD, but not just the first letter.
Not unless Bitch is her actual name - it's not a conventional title like Sir, or Mister.
The exclamation mark provides the emphasis on its own, I think.
“Me and Leylah (verb).” It’s a commonplace spoken construction. It is grammatical, a comprehensible construction in speech.
Please provide some authority that holds that construction ("me" first) as grammatical. It isn't. I use it to identify the undereducated--and, yes, there are a whole lot of undereducated folks walking about. There aren't many eighteen-year-old women pro tennis players who are English grammar authorities.
Do you use that construction in your writing?
Please re-read my response to Ezeerider with care. You'll find all your answers there.
Recall that, originally, Simon asserted that no one would ever say “Me went to the store.” Within the next few stories I read on Lit I found that construction twice. .