NYR More

Oxford University Press And The Oxford Comma Commotion

Oxford Comma

ROBERT BARR   06/30/11 08:10 PM ET   AP

LONDON — A report that Oxford University had changed its comma rule left some punctuation obsessives alarmed, annoyed, and distraught. Passions subsided as the university said the news was imprecise, incomplete and misleading.

Catch the difference between the two previous sentences? An "Oxford comma" was used before "and" in the first sentence, but is absent in the second, in accordance with the style used by The Associated Press.

Guides to correct style differ and the issue became heated on Twitter after reports of the Oxford comma's demise.

But have no fear, comma-philes: the Oxford comma lives.

Oxford University Press, birthplace of the Oxford comma, said Thursday that there has been no change in its century-old style, and jumped into the Twittersphere to confirm that it still follows the standard set out in "New Hart's Rules."

The only explicit permission to dispense with the Oxford comma – apparently the cause of the alarm – was in a guide for university staff on writing press releases and internal communications. "It's not new, it's been online for several years already," said Maria Coyle in the university press office.

Yet the report caused a Twitterstorm.

"For teaching me that the Oxford comma resolves ambiguity, I'd like to thank my parents, Sinead O'Connor and the Pope," said Twitter user Aaron Suggs ((at)ktheory), deftly illustrating the potential damage that can be caused to a sentence's meaning.

The kerfuffle at least answered the musical question posed by indie band Vampire Weekend: "Who gives a ---- about an Oxford comma?"

Well, people like Heather Anne Halpert ((at)blurryellow): "Are you people insane? The Oxford comma is what separates us from the animals."

Some style guides advocate the comma, others advise against it. Most also counsel using common sense to make the meaning clear.

William Strunk, Jr., who has guided generations of writers through "The Elements of Style," wrote in the book's first edition of 1918: "In a series of three or more terms with a single conjunction, use a comma after each term except the last."

That position is backed by "The Chicago Manual of Style" and the style manual of the U.S. Government Printing Office. The style guide of the British Broadcasting Corp. also commends liberal use of commas "in those pesky lists," and advises a comma to separate each item.

But style guides from The Associated Press and the London newspapers The Times and The Guardian dispense with a comma before the conjunction. The Queen's English Society agrees that "there is no need for a comma before the 'and' unless the sense demands it."

And there is even a third school, exemplified by Henry W. Fowler. In "The King's English" (2nd edition), published in 1908, he gave this example his approval: "Industry, honesty, and temperance, are essential to happiness."

"We unhesitatingly recommend the original and fully stopped form, which should be used irrespective of style, and not be interfered with by rhetorical considerations; it is the only one to which there is never any objection," Fowler said.

Students at Oxford University are free to choose a style in writing their papers. "They are just expected to use proper spelling and punctuation," Coyle said.

British writer Lynn Truss observed in her popular style guide, "Eats, Shoots & Leaves" – another example of how a comma or no comma changes meaning – that there are strong opinions on both sides.

"I'll just say this: Never get between these people when drink has been taken," she advised.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BOOKS

Filed by Zoe Triska  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 22
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lev Raphael
Author of "Book Lust!"
07:01 AM on 07/08/2011
For those of us who are authors, rules are one thing and "house style" is something else. It's mildly annoying to change publishers and find the new one has a different "rule"--for instance capitalizing or not capitalizing the first word after a colon.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bessielil
trying to organize hummingbirds
11:53 AM on 07/03/2011
Because I was taught to use it, not use it, then use it, I tell my Comp 101 students that it's a perfect example of changing rules and language usage. So many kids have been taught that the rules are immutable. Fragments can be effective. Yes, you may use first person point of view in your opinion papers. UK English varies from American English. And so on.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Lev Raphael
Author of "Book Lust!"
07:00 AM on 07/08/2011
You make excellent points. Back when I taught comp (among other courses), I made sure students were aware of changing styles, what the rules supposedly were, and who their audience was for what they were writing. Context was very important. Helping my two sons through high school, I had to do counter-programming, so to speak: "This is what good writing is/this is what your teacher wants. Know the difference." That revealed to me why freshmen came in with such rigid ideas about how to write and what made good writing.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
MaybeMilo
"You can't fight in here. This is the War room!"
05:44 PM on 07/01/2011
So THAT'S what that's called: the Oxford comma.

Chilly.
04:13 PM on 07/01/2011
I will continue to use both methods, depending on how I want the sentence to sound. If I want it to sound like I'm serious, speaking slowly, and giving weight to my words, I'll use the Oxford comma. If not, using an extra comma would be frivilous, excessive and wasteful! :)!
11:29 AM on 07/01/2011
who gives an f about the oxford comma...?
photo
robphilnz
The Guidelines don't fit my Bio
05:19 PM on 07/02/2011
People who communicate. There are times when it is necessary to clarify what is being written.
05:34 PM on 07/02/2011
I was quoting a Vampire Weekend song. No need to be condescending.
06:21 AM on 07/01/2011
Thank god this was a false alarm! Of course, I still put two spaces after a period, too, and don't believe anyone should say "entitled" when "titled" will do.
03:58 PM on 06/30/2011
I have taught English Comp 101 in small colleges over years, and when the Oxford comma disappeared from our textbooks in the '90s, I simply cried.

The 18th-century English grammatical conventions of Jeremy Lowth and Joseph Priestly were literary anchors for me during my formative years in the 1950s and '60s. They were solid in a world that was becoming increasingly amorphous and adrift in Cold War, Vietnam, and the British Invasion of the Beatles.

The dumbing-down of English usage already had begun in all its self-righteousness. Grammarians were castigated as old-fashioned fuddy-duddies, and later, outright racists!

With great apology to William Tyndale and his translation of Psalm 23, let me just say this: The Oxford comma is my linguistic shepherd; I shall not want.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
MaybeMilo
"You can't fight in here. This is the War room!"
05:42 PM on 07/01/2011
I pretty much lost it when "nucular" became generally acceptable in speech.

: )
09:18 PM on 07/01/2011
It is?
02:05 PM on 06/30/2011
IMHO the Oxford comma has always been stilted, pedantic and gratuitous. As my old prof used to say: "use commas as if they are in short supply".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fencik45
Are you experienced?
01:59 PM on 06/30/2011
W, T, F !?
photo
ThinkTwiceWriteOnce
Jarndyce v. Jarndyce
01:56 PM on 06/30/2011
, and all is right with the world.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TFDNYC
thought police stink
12:44 PM on 06/30/2011
Hooray. Switching to the Oxford comma was really difficult because we spend the first 13 years of our education learning that there is no comma before the 'and' at the end of the series. But when I got to college most professors insisted on it. Now I do it by default and do not want to switch back. It actually does make more sense.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hawkseye
we have nothing to fear but fear itself
12:06 PM on 06/30/2011
This is annoying, disconcerting, and unnecessary.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
11:55 AM on 06/30/2011
Thank God.  It was so hard for me to change to the Oxford comma when I wrote my dissertation.  I thought they might tell me it was for naught.
11:00 AM on 06/30/2011
Vampire Weekend said it best...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blacksmithn
Iron, cold iron, is master of them all...
10:16 AM on 06/30/2011
Tempest, meet teapot.