Questions tagged [vocatives]
Questions relating to nouns used in direct address, such as “John, what do you think you’re doing there?” or “Someone wants to see you now, Mr. President,” or in the archaic “O ye of little faith!”
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Is vocative comma rule vanishing?
According to some grammars[1][2] and CMS...
"Interjections and vocative should be separated from the rest of the sentence by commas".
The vocative case [1] is used to indicate direct address (i.e., ...
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Comma after address
Here's an example:
Chocolate lovers rejoice!
Chocolate lovers, rejoice!
To my understanding, the first one says that chocolate lovers are rejoicing and in the second one, we are asking the ...
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Is it acceptable to drop the comma in "Thanks, John"? [duplicate]
I grew up learning that the comma must be placed there, but it seems like an unnecessary interruption in a phrase that isn't ever spoken that way.
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What kind of word is "Brother" or "Sister"? [duplicate]
Some Christians use "Brother" or "Sister" before referring to someone, and usually they prefix the word before their name (e.g. Brother Aaron).
I am asking what the use of this ...
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Is ‘USAers’ just an ordinary English word today?
I saw the word, ‘USAers’ in the lead copy of Reuter’s news titled ‘Gippered’ in Time magazine (September 6), which says:
“More than 1/3 of USAers say they are worse off under Bam.
Warning-sign ...
6
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2
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"Happy Birthday sir!" or "Happy Birthday, sir!"?
Which one is grammatically correct?
Happy Birthday sir!
Happy Birthday, sir!
And where should I put "sir" in this sentence?
Congratulations for completing another trip around the sun!
Also suggest ...
5
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3
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Do you always have to put a comma before someone's name? [duplicate]
Example:
(1) Hello John. (2) Hello, John?
(3) How are you today John? (4) How are you today, John?
(5) I wish I could John. (6) I wish I could, John.
Must there always be a comma before ...
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On the capitalization of familial honorifics
We all know that Mom and Dad are capitalized when used in dialogue as a substitute for a name.
But is it the same for big sister, big brother, big sis, and big bro?
One example of the sentence would ...
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Where did we get "buster" as in "Look here, buster"?
Americans, at least, have for some time used buster in speech or dialogue as a generic form of address. It has a range of tonalities, from light to affectionate to grimly confrontational.
Listen, ...
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What explains the restrictions on determinative "you"?
As Huddleston & Pullum note, "you" can sometimes be used as a determiner:
You idiots never learn.
I'll never understand you idiots.
But this generally can't occur in the singular:
*...
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What case is used for pronouns in the vocative?
A coauthor and I are drafting a letter, and we're not yet sure whom we're going to be sending it to. So I sent a draft to my coauthor, which started
Dear [whomever]:
Now, that line in a letter is ...
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The vocative case and comma splices
I've been trying to find an answer to this question for some time, and have finally decided to... well, buck up some courage and ask.
In sentences like these two
"Hello, Mary, how are you?"
"Don'...
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2
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Addressing a person by occupation
In Dorothy Gladys “Dodie” Smith’s 1956 children’s novel, The Hundred and One
Dalmatians,
the author writes:
But though you can call a cook ‘Cook’, the one thing you cannot call a butler is ‘Butler’
...
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What is the vocative expression we can use to attract the attention of someone whose name or surname we don't know?
I was reading one of my old English Language books when I came across this:
"Madame, Señora, Signora, etc, are foreign vocative expressions and they have no equivalent, in either ...
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Comma issue: noun of direct address in the middle of the sentence after conjunction
Another nitpicky comma question that I hope you will help me to resolve.
How does one need to punctuate the noun of direct address (or vocative) in the middle of the sentence that goes directly after ...
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Omitting commas in brief statements
In a brief exhortation followed by the name of a sports team, such as "Let's go, Dodgers!" or "Go, Phillies!" is it ever appropriate to omit the comma?
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Is the vocative comma a recent thing?
It's usually considered necessary in the modern day, but I find the further back you go, the less frowned on its absence seems to be. I seem to remember a few vocative sentences in The Hobbit without ...