I cannot understand the difference between the comma and semicolon. Can you please clarify?
-
2Similar to this question.– Goodbye Stack ExchangeCommented Aug 19, 2010 at 20:04
-
1Similar yeah, in that semicolons are involved, but an exact duplicate (as someone has stated as his vote-to-close reason)? Hardly.– JonikCommented Aug 19, 2010 at 20:55
-
Mandatory oatmeal link theoatmeal.com/comics/semicolon– o0'.Commented Feb 20, 2011 at 19:14
-
I like this resource: writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/Semicolons.html– givanseCommented Aug 7, 2014 at 16:54
3 Answers
From eHow:
Comma (,)
1) Use a comma to separate 2 independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction such as and, but and or. The key here is to have 2 subject verb pairs.
Example: The students reviewed for the exam, and the teacher corrected the term papers.
In this example we have 2 subject verb pairs: "students reviewed" and "teacher corrected."
Example: The teacher corrected the papers and entered the grades in the grade book.
In this example we use the coordinating conjunction "and" but have 1 subject and 2 verbs: "teacher corrected, entered"; therefore, no comma is used.
2) Use a comma to separate items in a series to avoid ambiguous meaning.
Example: Uncle willed me his property, houses, and warehouses.
In this example, we mean that uncle willed me 3 items--his houses, warehouses, and property.
Example: Uncle willed me his property, houses and warehouses.
In this example, we mean that uncle willed me 2 items--all his property, which consisted of houses and warehouses.
3) Use a comma with introductory elements such as subordinating clauses that come at the beginning of the sentence.
Example: Because the river had flooded, the school closed for the week.
The introductory element, or subordinating clause is "because the river had flooded." It is introduced with the subordinating conjunction "because."
Example: The school closed for the week because the river had flooded.
In this example the subordinating clause is at the end of the sentence so we do not use a comma.
Semicolon (;)
1) Use a semicolon to separate 2 independent clauses in a sentence, closely related, with no coordinating conjunction.
Example: The students reviewed for the exam; the teacher corrected the papers.
Example: The candidates spoke to the crowds during Election Day; each candidate spoke passionately about the fate of the country.
2) Use a semicolon to separate items in a series where the series themselves contain commas.
Example: We visited our relatives in Albany, NY; Philadelphia, PA; and Washington, D.C.
-
3You wrote comma but inserted a period in your "Comma" header. ;)– mipadiCommented Aug 19, 2010 at 20:22
-
@mipadi: Aah, it was a tiring day. Thanks for pointing out :) Commented Aug 19, 2010 at 21:07
-
1Copying entire pages like this doesn't seem fair to eHow or its author, and - because I doubt it qualifies as fair use - it's probably illegal. Commented Aug 19, 2010 at 23:41
-
2@ladenedge: Why don't you sue me? If this is illegal, then the majority of the users becomes convicted. I'm giving the source at the top of my answer, and I don't see why it is illegal to share information which was posted openly on another site. I'm not exposing "official secrets", yet I'm giving a useful answer with citation. Commented Aug 20, 2010 at 8:03
-
Obviously HG Wells hadn't come across the (2016 update) advice from Lisa Newcomb at Purdue in his Time Machine: "... [T]he jerking sun became a streak of fire, a brilliant arch, in space; the moon a fainter fluctuating band; and I could see nothing of the stars, save now and then a brighter circle flickering in the blue." Or perhaps he had but didn't consider himself bound by non-essential mundane constraints. Commented Nov 25, 2019 at 11:54
You use a semicolon (;
) to create a compound sentence made of two complete sentences. For example: John went to school; today was his first day. is equivalent to John went to school. Today was his first day. and so is correct.
Use of a semicolon is inappropriate in any other case. The following is incorrect: Because John went to school; Sally was left home alone. because if we split into two sentences, Because John went to school. Sally was left home alone., the first is a sentence fragment.
In addition, use of a comma to separate two complete sentences (John went to school, today was his first day.) is inappropriate and is called a comma splice.
The first is a comma, which is just a pause that off-sets a phrase. The second is a semi-colon, "used to indicate a major division in a sentence where a more distinct separation is felt between clauses or items on a list than is indicated by a comma, as between the two clauses of a compound sentence."
-
The bigger problem for me is trying to remember the difference of usages between semi-colon ( ";" ) and colon ( ":" ). The thing to remember about commas, is that they typically have something that is not structurally necessary to the sentence in them.– mfgCommented Aug 19, 2010 at 19:59
-
A sentence is, at base, a noun (N) and a verb (V). Everything else is built off that structure. ie, John sits = (John|N)+(sits|V). If you introduce a colon, it could be for this, "John sits: Jane walks away" = (N+V:N+V+A*). But to introduce a semi-colon it would be for "John sits; the world spinning." (the semi-colon join an N+V and some other phrase) (*A=adverb)– mfgCommented Aug 19, 2010 at 20:00