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Applied Linguistics 1995 16(1):1-14; doi:10.1093/applin/16.1.1
© 1995 by Oxford University Press
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Articles

The Rise and Fall of the Semicolon: English Punctuation Theory and English Teaching Practice

PAUL BRUTHlAUX

City Polytechnic Hong Kong

Descriptions of English punctuation in modern instruction manuals offer elaborate descriptions of the properties of each mark in the system, but rarely note their relative frequency As a result, analysts tend to overstate the role of intermediate marks In response, this study reviews the four hundred year evolution of semicolon use in one genre of English It presents evidence that after flourishing in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the semicolon may have become a marginal component of the English punctuation system In order for this evolution to be reflected in teaching practice, both writers and instructors need to rely not on conventionalized theories but on descriptions of punctuation practice in naturally-occurnng texts


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