User talk:Lomaprieta

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[edit] Ann Coulter

Thanks for your good work in copy editing this article. In American usage, if there is a comma after a word in double quotes, the comma goes before the closing quote, not after it. This has always seemed not quite proper to me, but I've finally accepted it as a fact of life. ;-) Lou Sander 02:22, 6 October 2006 (UTC) (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.)

That's how I learned it in (American) school too; I've only recently changed to British spelling and punctuation rules. I had a look in Wikipedia's Manual of Style, and it says, "When punctuating quoted passages, include the punctuation mark inside the quotation marks only if the sense of the punctuation mark is part of the quotation ("logical" quotations). When using 'scare quotes' to indicate a phrase used ironically, the comma or period always goes outside." And following is a list of examples. I'm not certain why the British is preferred, but it strikes me as more correct since the included comma isn't actually part of the quotation marks. It still looks wrong to me, too!
If it hadn't been in the Manual of Style, I would have left it alone because it's an article about an American-born citizen and should (as far as I'm concerned) conform to American usage. Lomaprieta 02:31, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
GMTA on your American-born point! -- I almost put that in my previous message. I'll have to look more closely at Wikipedia's MOS, but I've spent years trying to follow the Chicago Manual of Style, and I'm afraid I won't be able to change, especially since practically anybody can change the Wiki manual when I'm not looking. ;-) I'm pretty sure all these quotation mark matters were covered in Eats, Shoots & Leaves, which you'd probably like to read, if you haven't already. Lou Sander 04:24, 6 October 2006 (UTC)

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