marshalt
You guys are dicks...
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2004
- Posts
- 25,896
So maybe I should ask the authors or the how-to board but I don't know those fuckers at all.
Here's my question. When you're writing dialog in a story, what is the proper way to show someone being interrupted? Let's say John and Sarah are having a conversation. John is saying something, but Sarah cuts him off mid-sentence.
Here's an example of the dialog.
John: I think we should
Sarah: Let me stop you, because I already know what you're going to say
Now, proper punctuation for writing dialog would say the conversation should look something like this.
John and Sarah sat silently while they thought about getting a dog. After several minutes, John spoke up and said, "I think we should."
"Let me stop you," Sarah interrupted, "because I already know what you're going to say."
John's dialog is the issue here. Or rather, the proper way to punctuate it. What I want to make clear to the reader is that John is being interrupted. He never gets to finish his sentence. The way it's written now, it looks like John is saying yes, they should get a dog.
I've wondered about using ellipses or maybe a dash to end the sentence, to show that John had more to say, but was interrupted.
"I think we should..."
"I think we should-"
I really don't know the proper way to do this.
Any ideas?
Here's my question. When you're writing dialog in a story, what is the proper way to show someone being interrupted? Let's say John and Sarah are having a conversation. John is saying something, but Sarah cuts him off mid-sentence.
Here's an example of the dialog.
John: I think we should
Sarah: Let me stop you, because I already know what you're going to say
Now, proper punctuation for writing dialog would say the conversation should look something like this.
John and Sarah sat silently while they thought about getting a dog. After several minutes, John spoke up and said, "I think we should."
"Let me stop you," Sarah interrupted, "because I already know what you're going to say."
John's dialog is the issue here. Or rather, the proper way to punctuate it. What I want to make clear to the reader is that John is being interrupted. He never gets to finish his sentence. The way it's written now, it looks like John is saying yes, they should get a dog.
I've wondered about using ellipses or maybe a dash to end the sentence, to show that John had more to say, but was interrupted.
"I think we should..."
"I think we should-"
I really don't know the proper way to do this.
Any ideas?