My blog provides tips for new writers on writing paragraphs, tackling grammar, and designing essays. There are also prompts for creative writers and ideas for tutoring and teaching writing. Enjoy!

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

What is the difference between a colon and a semi-colon?

I get this question a lot. People tend to confuse the two. First, a colon is this : while this ; is a semi-colon. If you think about the two as emoticons, the colon is straight forward looking at you, while the semi-colon is winking. Second, each has specific uses. Let's start with the colon. It is used after a complete sentence when what follows is either a list or a definition. For examples, see my post on the colon. The semi-colon is used most often between two complete sentences when the second sentence adds more information to the first. It has a poetic power when applied correctly, but it looks silly when misused. For examples, see my posts on semi-colons and on run-ons (under Option 2). Also semi-colons can be used to separate the items in a list -- instead of using commas -- if individual items in the list already contain commas. Otherwise, the overwhelming amount of commas would befuddle the meaning of the sentence.

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