Grammar Nazis! I need you help..

JoLLyRoGer

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2000
4,153
4
81
When writing a paper, how do you delimit a list of cities and states. i.e.

Blah Blah Blah... which includes St. Louis, Missouri, Trenton, New Jersey, and San Jose, California.

All of those commas can't be the right way to do this; it just looks stupid. However, when you write out an address you write Tucson, Arizona. Not Tucson Arizona

Thanks,
JR..
 

BlueWeasel

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
15,944
475
126
Well, if the cities are well-known (as those appear to be), could you just simply leave off the state?
 

athithi

Golden Member
Mar 5, 2002
1,717
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...abbreviate and capitalize the states?

Blah Blah Blah... which includes St. Louis, MO, Trenton, NJ, and San Jose, CA.
 

shud

Golden Member
Mar 24, 2003
1,200
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Yeah, it looks weird, but it's right. Try ending something you're quoting with a quote from someome. "So I told her, 'WTF335'!" All of those quotes look goofy.
 

VTHodge

Golden Member
Aug 3, 2001
1,575
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All of the above are good. At least abbreviate the states. Excluding them is fine for those particular cities. If its more than three cities, try making a list. Nothing wrong with that. But a comma is the correct punctuation in a paragraph.
 

loic2003

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2003
3,844
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Hmm... have you considered brackets or hyphens?


Blah Blah Blah... which includes St. Louis (Missouri), Trenton (New Jersey), and San Jose (California).

Blah Blah Blah... which includes St. Louis - Missouri, Trenton - New Jersey, and San Jose - California.

Just an idea....
 

jalaram

Lifer
Aug 14, 2000
12,920
2
81
Originally posted by: HeroOfPellinor
You're supposed to use a semicolon to separate comma separated items.

/BA in English

That's the way I've always learned it.

St. Louis, Missouri; Trenton, New Jersey; and San Jose, California.

Another option (though I never liked it) is to use and instead of commas.

St. Louis, Missouri and Trenton, New Jersey and San Jose, California.
 

JoLLyRoGer

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2000
4,153
4
81
Originally posted by: Joemonkey
well you might start by spelling Grammar correctly :)

Oops!!:eek:

Like I said, I need you helpl...;)

<--GrammAr + spelling != My strong suit.

JR..
 

JoLLyRoGer

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2000
4,153
4
81
Originally posted by: jalaram
Originally posted by: HeroOfPellinor
You're supposed to use a semicolon to separate comma separated items.

/BA in English

That's the way I've always learned it.

St. Louis, Missouri; Trenton, New Jersey; and San Jose, California.

Another option (though I never liked it) is to use and instead of commas.

St. Louis, Missouri and Trenton, New Jersey and San Jose, California.

Thanks guys, that's what I'm going to go with.
 

Legendary

Diamond Member
Jan 22, 2002
7,019
1
0
Originally posted by: JoLLyRoGer
Originally posted by: jalaram
Originally posted by: HeroOfPellinor
You're supposed to use a semicolon to separate comma separated items.

/BA in English

That's the way I've always learned it.

St. Louis, Missouri; Trenton, New Jersey; and San Jose, California.

Another option (though I never liked it) is to use and instead of commas.

St. Louis, Missouri and Trenton, New Jersey and San Jose, California.

Thanks guys, that's what I'm going to go with.

Hopefully you were referring to the semi-colon idea and not the "and" idea.
 

JoLLyRoGer

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2000
4,153
4
81
Originally posted by: Banana
"delimit"

?

And, yes, use semi-colon.

Yeah, it's programmer/database speak. i.e. A "comma delimited" list.

I couldn't think of a better word.
 

JoLLyRoGer

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2000
4,153
4
81
Originally posted by: Legendary
Originally posted by: JoLLyRoGer
Originally posted by: jalaram
Originally posted by: HeroOfPellinor
You're supposed to use a semicolon to separate comma separated items.

/BA in English

That's the way I've always learned it.

St. Louis, Missouri; Trenton, New Jersey; and San Jose, California.

Another option (though I never liked it) is to use and instead of commas.

St. Louis, Missouri and Trenton, New Jersey and San Jose, California.

Thanks guys, that's what I'm going to go with.

Hopefully you were referring to the semi-colon idea and not the "and" idea.

Yes I was referring to the semi-colon method. ;)