Among my fellow punctuation nerds, I have a reputation
as someone who does not see any use for semicolons. Cecelia
Watson, who teaches at Bard College, has written a whole
book about them: “Semicolon: The Past, Present, and Future
of a Misunderstood Mark.”
Watson, a historian and philosopher of science and a
teacher of writing and the humanities—in other words, a
Renaissance woman—gives us a deceptively playful-looking
book that turns out to be a scholarly treatise on a
sophisticated device that has contributed eloquence and
mystery to Western civilization.
The semicolon itself was a Renaissance invention. It first
appeared in 1494, in a book published in Venice by Aldus
Manutius. “De Aetna,” Watson explains, was “an essay,
written in dialogue form,” about climbing Mt. Etna. The mark
was a hybrid between a comma and a colon, and its purpose
was to prolong a pause or create a more distinct separation
between parts of a sentence.
The problem with the semicolon is not how it looks but
what it does and how that has changed over time. In the old
days, punctuation simply indicated a pause. Comma, colon:
semicolon; period. Eventually, grammarians and copy editors
came along and made themselves indispensable by
punctuating (“pointing”) a writer’s prose “to delineate
clauses properly, such that punctuation served syntax.” That
is, commas, semicolons, and colons were included in a
sentence in order to highlight, subordinate, or otherwise
conduct its elements, connecting them syntactically. One of
the rules is that, unless you are composing a list, a semicolon
is supposed to be followed by a complete clause, capable of
standing on its own. The semicolon can take the place of a
conjunction, like “and” or “but,” but it should not be used in
addition to it.
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/comma-queen/sympathy-for-thesemicolon. July 15, 2019. Adaptado.
No texto, a expressão “deceptively playful-looking” (2º
parágrafo) indica que o livro de Cecelia Watson
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