Wren And Martin Middle - School English Grammar And
The judge — a wise, old semicolon — nodded. “Rule 37: Use a comma before a direct address, after an interjection, and to separate clauses that might otherwise argue.”
“Let’s eat, Grandma.”
The evidence: “I’m sorry you’re late” without comma versus “I’m sorry, you’re late” with comma. Same words. Two meanings: apology vs. accusation. Wren And Martin Middle School English Grammar And
Suddenly, she was standing in a grey courtroom. On trial: a single, trembling comma. The prosecutor was a full stop — stern, final. “This comma causes confusion!” it boomed. The judge — a wise, old semicolon — nodded
The comma was freed. And Aanya woke up with ink on her fingers and a new sentence in her head: The judge — a wise
Aanya laughed. Until Tuesday.