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AIQ
12:00 AM
Sometimes I see incorrect interpretations, but I don't say anything because they are correct 99% of the time and wrong 1% of the time, and I am wrong 99%.
 
@AIQ Don't be self-deprecating. You have made some very helpful contributions
Oh btw, I consider your recent meta post one of the important issues ever broached
I wanted to write something under it. Haven't got around to it.
 
AIQ
Thanks ... :)
 
 
3 hours later…
3:37 AM
@M.A.R. I've never had it, they don't sell it here
 
AIQ
3:58 AM
Maple syrup is like a must have here ... but I don't understand why is so expensive
 
 
2 hours later…
5:52 AM
On a second thought, it must be on sale somewhere in Yekaterinburg, but I'm such a home-sitter that I don't even know.
 
 
1 hour later…
7:21 AM
What does quack mean in this sentence
"Some of them turn to quack remedies."
 
AIQ
7:44 AM
Quack remedies or quack cures are medical treatments that you think are unlikely to work because they are not scientific. - Collins
@CroCo
 
 
2 hours later…
AIQ
10:08 AM
In an answer, Colin Fine wrote "It's perfectly grammatical, and reasonably natural."
Why is there a comma there like that? If we drop the obvious "it is" then we need to drop that comma too. Comma with a conjunction implies they are two independent clauses - but the latter isn't an independent clause. The latter does not have a subject.
 
10:51 AM
@AIQ There's no such rule.
ell.stackexchange.com/q/232340/3395 I never would've guessed this was a great question had it not been for that superb answer.
I suppose etymology, or whatever that thing is, does spice things up a bit in a positive way.
I find the expression reasonably natural to be a little funny when considered literally.
@AIQ Btw, that wasn't a reference to anyone in particular, if that's what you were referring to. I realized the coincidence when I was typing it, but yeah.
And if that's not what you were referring to, it wasn't a reference to anything else either – not a deliberate one, that is.
 
11:51 AM
@AIQ thanks.
 
 
4 hours later…
4:04 PM
> We confirmed that the intensity of hair redness negatively correlated with physical health, mental health, fecundity and sexual desire, and positively with the number of kinds of drugs prescribed by a doctor currently taken, and with reported symptoms of impaired mental health.
 
 
2 hours later…
6:14 PM
@CowperKettle You should've read the rest of the abstract.
Or at least cited the rest. In this case the word correlation was used with its proper meaning, for those bereft of patience, haha.
 
6:58 PM
Hey. Is "makes a profit off of it" correct English?
 
@rahuldottechsupportsMonica It could be depending on the rest of the sentence
 
@rahuldottechsupportsMonica It's grammatical so far.
 
> I know the violation of trust is from Amazon's "partners" but Amazon allows this to happen, and makes a profit off of it.
Use "off of" kinda confuses me.
 
I’d probably say “profits from it”
 
Yeah, that makes sense
 
7:06 PM
or “profits off of it”
 
@rahuldottechsupportsMonica It's equivalent to just off.
 
or “makes a profit on it” - there are a lot of ways to say it. Sorry that’s probably not very helpful
But “makes a profit off of it” is fine
 
7:23 PM
0
Q: "They have their own house" or "They have a house of their own"?

Marie MitIs it correct if I say"They have their own house?" or does the variant "They have a house of their own" suit better from the point of view of grammar?And if both of the variants do exist, is their any difference in the meaning between these sentences? And if I change "have" into "live"(They live...

0
Q: "They live in their own house" or "they live in a house of their own"?

Marie MitIs it correct if I say "They live in their own house?" or is "They live in a house of their own" the only correct variant in this case?(I mean grammar) And will the correctness remain the same if I change" live" into "have"?(They have a house of their own/ They have their own house).

0
Q: "They have a house of their own" or "They have their own house"?

Marie MitIs it correct if I say "They have their own house" or is the variant "They have a house of their own" the only correct in this case?And if I change "have" into "live"(they live in their own house/they live in a house of their own), will somwthing change from the point of view of grammar and "corr...

Same question. Three times over. Two different accounts
I put in a close vote on one of them, but seems like not a lot of people are paying attention to the close queue
 
7:51 PM
I closed the newer ones as duplicates of the old and brought it to the mod team’s attention
@EddieKal 👀 up ^
 
AIQ
@userr2684291 But there is. I have seen this in many places. Perhaps, it's best to call them guidelines, as I have learnt here there are no rules in English
grammarly.com/blog/comma-before-and says "The dog is well trained, and good natured." is incorrect. There shouldn't be a comma there.
It should be "The dog is well trained and good natured."
Can someone comment on this - "It's perfectly grammatical, and reasonably natural."
 
8:10 PM
In dog example, I expect a list. “The dog is well trained, loyal, and good natured.” In the grammatical example, the comma doesn’t bother me. “It’s grammatical, and also (now that I think about it) idiomatic.”
I don’t really know the rules for commas though.
I tend to omit them unless they are necessary for the meaning, or I’m writing as I would speak it and want to introduce a pause.
We had, a user once, who would, include an exorbitant number, of commas, in their posts, and it, was truly, unreadable for me.
 
Didn't know UNC had a fairly comprehensive writing guide page
 
Apparently though a long time ago, more commas were popular
 
AIQ
:(
 
So in some style guides, it is incorrect to use commas that way. If I remember correctly it is recommended to avoid such punctuation in the SATs
 
AIQ
I have seen this in ELL and ELU too - the coordinating conjunction comma thing
 
8:19 PM
SAVE THE COMMAS
 
But on the other hand a lot of people argue that punctuation especially commas should reflect actual speech. If you were to read it out loud and have to pause for style or emphasis, you put a comma there.
 
Hi,,,,,
 
@AIQ This might help a little thecriticalreader.com/…
 
@ColleenVpartedways That page mentions the ACT and SAT. Makes sense it follows the stricter set of rules.
 
This answer on ELU is interesting, but only tangentially related... it shows two passages from the same publication but over 100 years apart in time. The older one has a lot more punctuation...
4
A: Should a serial comma be used when mimicking Victorian-era British text?

JLGI would venture to say, yes. (Just for the sake of completeness in this answer, I am considering the Victorian era to be from 1837 to 1901.) In this article about the Oxford comma, which is another name for the serial comma, the author gives two examples showing punctuation from the same Britis...

@EddieKal I liked the advice to only worry about when you must use a comma instead of also worrying when the comma is optional
 
AIQ
8:30 PM
@ColleenVpartedways So is this thought process wrong: Since a comma is mandatory before a conjunction when it's joining two independent clauses, then the comma is unwarranted before a conjunction when it's joining an independent clause and a dependent clause.
 
Seems logical although I’d say “unnecessary” instead of “unwarranted”.
 
@AIQ That kinda depends
You're being very absolutist about it
2
I wanted to use that word.
I hadn't ever used that word before.
 
@AIQ if you're not aware of these terms, I suggest looking up for "restrictive" and "non-restrictive relative clauses"
 
AIQ
I am
 
8:35 PM
Well I guess that's the only "rule" that is rarely ever broken, if it is
 
AIQ
I think I know them pretty well - I have answered a few questions on those
Okay, so I see there is a general consensus here - worry about where you must use a comma
Thanks @ColleenVpartedways
 
Joe, a semicolon, and an Oxford Comma walk into a bar.
...
They both had a great time.
 
AIQ
@M.A.R. Thanks for that word. Now I need to use it - to describe myself. Probably best when I lecture my friends
 
Hey isn't that how it always works
@ColleenVpartedways Stop messing my mind!
 
AIQ
ColleenV called me a semicolon
lol
 
8:40 PM
Sorry I meant to reply to you
 
AIQ
it could be a list, or it could be the "non-restrictive element"
 
I’m on my phone and had to switch to the full site to upload that image.
My eyes are too old and my fingers are too fat to use the full site on my phone
I was walking past a farm and a sign said, “Duck, eggs.” I thought, “That’s an unnecessary comma…”

– and then it hit me.
 
AIQ
Ducks are pretty expensive
 
@ColleenVpartedways I see we have a new @Cowp
 
8:52 PM
@M.A.R. I’m just the tribute band :p One more then back to work.
The grammarian was very logical.

He had a lot of comma sense.
 
AIQ
lol
I asked a question in SFF to cross check my answer here in ELL. That question in SFF got 2 downvotes initially
and then it got a bunch of upvotes
now there is 6 downs and 16 ups = net 10
the answer that I accepted has 60 ups
all that in 1 day
strange how we don't see that happen here often
 
9:46 PM
@ColleenVpartedways nooooooooooooooo.com
 
 
1 hour later…
10:48 PM
-1
Q: Who On The Earth Is "Monica"?

Kentaro Donates For MonicaI am getting to see some users playing their username with a woman called Monica, and I just would like to know if she is kind of a "The Nice" sketch in a comedians' sketch "The nice" = Denise. Okay whoever she might be, who is she. Thank you for your support^^.

 
 
1 hour later…
AIQ
11:58 PM
facepalm
 

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