I’ve counted 6 missing commas.
Comment on Germans: what genocide?
verdigris@lemmy.ml 7 months agoNone of those sentences needed commas, they’re just not constructed very clearly.
Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de 7 months ago
verdigris@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
You overuse commas.
Bluetooth@feddit.dk 7 months ago
No, he doesn’t.
verdigris@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
Read some Cormac McCarthy some time.
Threeme2189@lemmy.world 7 months ago
No, u
brbposting@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
I, as a German, asked an expert on that topic: ChatGPT. According to ChatGPT, there is no genocide if you don’t kill them with the intention to wipe them from the planet. So, if for example you drop accidentally poison into their water because you mixed the botox and sugar bottle in the water station, then even if they all die it is not a genocide.
And since ChatGPT is infallible, this is the only truth.
—
Six commas, colon, capitalization, “infallible”. Infallible like my editing 🤓 & dunt u disagreeme
verdigris@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
Okay, yes, those are all valid places to put commas, good job. None of them are grammatically necessary.
brbposting@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
Good point!
Interesting, anywhere I can read about grammatically necessary vs. recommended yet unnecessary commas? (Perhaps on the first search result for that question heh)
verdigris@lemmy.ml 7 months ago
This is a decent article, at least for the most part: I actually don’t like their examples for the “Preposition of Time” stuff at all, the versions with commas are just bad writing.
But basically it just comes down to whether the sentence/clause can be parsed unambiguously without the commas. There is no syntactical difference between “I as a German asked…” and “I, as a German, asked…”. It’s entirely a style choice.