Just a sample of the Echomail archive
Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.
|    ENGLISH_TUTOR    |    English Tutoring for Students of the Eng    |    4,347 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 2,199 of 4,347    |
|    Ardith Hinton to Richard Miles    |
|    Hello    |
|    24 Oct 16 23:46:10    |
      * Reposting this message because we had a glitch on our system a few days ago,       and it apparently didn't go where we'd intended it to.... Q-)                     Hi & welcome, Richard! Recently you wrote in a message to mark lewis:               ml> please also forgive me my typing style with all lower case and using        ml> three dots instead of periods... i've been typing on the computer like        ml> this for over 30 years and it is s very hard habit/style to break...               RM> A close blogger friend of mine for the last 13 years has the same        RM> habit of using ellipses to end all of his sentences. The same as you        RM> I guess, you just get used to it and it becomes a "signature" style.                      Bob Satti, who was another member of net 1:153, often used dots.        He told us he'd developed the habit in days of yore when people would be timed       out if they took too long to think without using the keyboard. Dallas & I saw       this happen with users on our BBS who went to attend to their kids, e.g., and       failed to notice the warning PLEASE RESPOND... [chuckle].               From a grammatical standpoint Mark writes in "run-on" sentences...       a no-no when I was in school. But unlike some other folks, he's very careful       WRT how many dots he uses. In American usage it's considered acceptable to       use the ellipsis to represent a pause nowadays when the exchange is informal.        I made a point of checking that out awhile ago because I do it myself       sometimes.               In summary, the ellipsis may be used as a less abrupt substitute       for the dash... or it may, with the addition of a period, be used at the       conclusion of a sentence. I've used it both ways in this reply. Mark's usage       isn't quite what the textbook authors had in mind there. But he's consistent       about it, and he knows how to employ white space to make things easy to       read.... :-)                                   --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+        * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca