Blog Writing With the Oxford Comma
With the Say It For You focus this week on proper grammar and spelling for blog writers, I couldn’t resist mentioning the Oxford comma. The who? you ask.
Wherever there’s a list of things, you’ll find commas to separate the items. Provided you’re a believer in the Oxford or serial comma, you’d include it right before the final item in the list.
Newspaper reporters (and I was a newspaper columnist for many years) typically don’t use that last comma. The AP Style guide we use in the two colleges where I work does not require the Oxford. As for me, I do prefer to use that last comma, for the simple reason that it helps avoid confusion. The absolute last thing blog content writers want is to create confusion. To the contrary – our whole purpose in life is to clarify the situation so that online readers feel comfortable and see themselves using our clients’ products and services.
Ann Edwards, writing in grammarly.com, appears to agree with me. Edwards offers an example of how a reader might misinterpret matters in the absence of a clarifying Oxford comma:
“I love my parents, Lady Gaga and Humpty Dumpty.”
(Without the comma, the sentence might be interpreted as meaning that you love your parents, who are Lady Gaga and Humpty Dumpty, rather than your loving four people – your parents, Lady Gaga, and Humpty Dumpty.)
Another example is offered by grammarbook.com:
Her $10 million estate was split among her husband, daughter, son, and nephew.”
(Without the last comma, you might imagine that the son and nephew had to split one third of the estate, rather than understanding that each relative got one fourth of the whole estate.)
The Oxford isn’t always necessary to make the meaning clear, I explain to blog content writers. Here’s a sentence where you’d understand, even without the comma, that there are four pool care activities being mentioned:
“You’ll need to add chemicals, monitor chlorine levels, scoop out debris
and prepare the pool as the seasons change.”
Still, I was happy to learn, the Chicago Manual of Style, MLA and US Government Printing Office all advocate the use of the Oxford comma, even though the Associated Press advises against.
Anyway, my own thought about using the Oxford Comma is, “Above all, create no confusion!”
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