A reader sent me the following passage, which reminded me that
maybe I should repost my Celestial Grammar:
Seatmates May Share Their Deepest Secrets Or Their
Bologna, The Wall Street Journal,
9th August 1996, p. A4, col. 5:
The close confines [on airlines] sometimes bring on unwanted
advances or other bizarre behavior. Robert Cross, chairman of an
aviation revenue-management firm, recalls that on a flight from
Dallas to Atlanta, he was seated next to a woman who was
feverishly scribbling in a notebook. As the flight was about to
land, she asked Mr. Cross if he wouldn’t mind proofreading
her work. On the page were two paragraphs of what he delicately
describes as “pornography.”
“I was flabbergasted,” he says. So he did the only thing
he could think to do. “I just critiqued it from a
grammatical standpoint: This is a run-on sentence, you ended this
with a preposition.”
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I do not believe that grammar is more important than
ideas. However, as a reviewer for The Celestial Reviews on
alt.sex.stories.moderated
(“ASSM”), I have read many stories in which
the grammar stood in the way of what the author was trying to say.
In many cases there were a few simple errors that the authors
could have easily avoided. These mistakes annoy most readers (not
just myself); and by avoiding them you can improve the chances
that your readers will understand your story.
Although these guidelines are written with ASSM in
mind, they are equally applicable to high school and college term
papers and to numerous other practical situations. You may quote
these rules in high school and college term papers, as long as you
follow the correct format. I dare you!
Seriously, many writers can significantly improve their writing
skills by following these guidelines, which cover the most common
errors made by ordinary writers—including ASSM
authors and writers of college term papers. There are at least
two college teachers of English composition that I know about who
use these grammar guidelines as part of their courses. Since that
has started to happen, I guess I should be responsible and tell
you where else to find good information on grammar and style. I
strongly recommend Strunk & White’s Elements of
Style. The third edition is the latest; web versions of the
first edition, by Strunk, may be found here and here.
When I need to look up a grammar rule, my main source is
The Little, Brown Handbook
, published by Little, Brown.
For word choice and usage questions I use the Unabridged Random House Dictionary and the New York Times Manual
of Style and Usage. I also lurk on, and occasionally
contribute to, a news-group called
alt.usage.english
. But
don’t quote me over there. Those people are interesting but
serious; and I always clean up my examples before I post comments
there.
I also occasionally post The Advanced Celestial
Grammar, which goes into questions slightly more technical
than those discussed here. Both these notes and The Advanced Grammar
are under continuous development, and if you have questions or
suggestions, Nat
would be happy to hear from you.
The following topics are covered here:
-
Apostrophes
-
Verb tense
-
Run-on sentences
-
Sentence fragments
-
Commas
-
Semicolons
-
Some frequently misused words
-
Handling dialog
These additional topics are covered in The Advanced Celestial
Grammar, which is posted separately:
-
Restrictive phrases and clauses
- Dangling and misplaced modifiers
- Relative and interrogative pronouns
-
Apostrophes
-
Don’t make a noun plural by adding apostrophe s (’s). This
rule applies to all nouns—including proper nouns.
(The plural of Smith is Smiths, not Smith’s.)
The purpose of an apostrophe with a noun is to show possession.
Example: Sue’s pussy means the pussy that
belongs to Sue (at least until she gives it to someone else).
Some confusion arises when you use plurals with apostrophes.
For example, Smiths’ orgy refers to the
orgy held by Mr. and Mrs. Smith. In this case, write the plural
(with the s) and just add the apostrophe (without another s).
It can get more complicated than this, but we don’t want to write
a grammar book here.
-
Verb tense
-
Stick with one tense, unless you have a reason to change.
Bad: I was walking down the street one day. I
see a girl who was wearing no bra or panties.
Better: I was walking down the street one day.
I saw a girl who was wearing no bra or panties.
There are cases when it does make sense to change verb tenses.
Just do so on purpose. (Verb tense is discussed in greater detail
in The Advanced
Celestial Grammar.)
-
Run-On sentences
-
When you are finished with a sentence, use a period and begin a
new sentence. Sometimes this becomes complicated, because many
sentences contain more than one idea (like this one.) The easiest
way to deal with this is to read the sentence and see if it
expresses a coherent thought. If you are uncertain, turn it into
two or more separate sentences.
-
Sentence fragments
-
Make sure every sentence contains a full thought that makes sense.
Bad: He kept fucking her. Until she begged him
to stop.
Better:: "He kept fucking her until she begged him to
stop.”
Actually, it’s sometimes OK to have an incomplete
sentence (like the one marked Bad: above); but you
should only do that on purpose. And for a good reason. Like
emphasis. Like this. But it gets distracting if you do this too
often. Like this.
Improper fragments seem to occur most often when the writer has a
long sentence that concludes with a subordinate clause. The
writer often incorrectly puts the last thought into a separate
sentence, like this:
Bad: While she continued to drive him crazy by
fondling his balls with her free hand, she began to suck on his
cock. Until he came in a wild explosion of excitement.
In this example there should be a comma after cock, and a
lowercase until. (One Freudian theory is that women
make this mistake more often then men—because they think
something bad will happen if they skip a period.)
-
Commas
-
A comma tells the reader to pause within a sentence.
Don’t overuse commas. But don’t underuse them either.
In general, if the sentence is confusing because the reader may
run words together, you should add a comma. Both of the commas in
my previous sentence were necessary for this reason. Many writers
would add a comma in the previous sentence to make it
necessary, for this reason; but that would be a
mistake—for this reason is closely related to the rest of the
sentence.
The best way to deal with commas is to read each sentence to
yourself, and to check and see whether additional commas would
make the sentence easier to read, and to eliminate commas that
make things drag needlessly. (Omitting the commas in my preceding
sentence would make it hard to figure out what I was trying to
say.)
There are many more rules for commas, some of which I’ll discuss
later; but the preceding commonsense rule works pretty well.
-
Semicolons
-
The semicolon can be viewed as a combination of a super-comma
and a half-period. (That’s why it’s a period written
above a comma.) That is, it can serve as a half-period by joining
two sentences into one (as in the first two rules below); and it
can serve as a super-comma by replacing a comma in situations
where a comma itself won’t quite do the job (as in Rules 3
and 4). Here are specific rules:
-
Use a semicolon to join two clauses when these two clauses are
not joined by a coordinating conjunction. (When they are
joined by a coordinating conjunction, use a comma - except in the
case of Rule 4 below.) The coordinating conjunctions are
and, but, or, and for.
The following are all correct—at least grammatically,
although the order may be reversed socially:
I licked her pussy. Then she sucked my cock.
I licked her pussy, and then she sucked my cock.
I licked her pussy; then she sucked my cock.
In the actual context of a story, the sentences would convey a
slightly different meaning. For example, the third sentence
suggests that the two activities were more intimately connected
than the first (because the author put the two ideas in a single
sentence).
-
Use a semicolon to join two clauses when these two clauses are
joined by a conjunctive adverb. (When they are joined by
and plus a conjunctive adverb, use a comma—except
in the case of Rule 3 below.)
Conjunctive adverbs include words like therefore,
however, “thus,” and
“furthermore.” {Note: If you have trouble recognizing
conjunctive adverbs, you can ignore this rule and simply apply
Rule 1; you will almost always be correct anyway.}
Example: I licked her pussy; therefore she
sucked my cock.
-
Even when main clauses are joined by a coordinating
conjunction, use a semicolon (instead of a comma) to join them if
the clauses are very long and complex or if they contain
commas.
This rule is the one about which readers have been giving me
grief. I’m simply going to state one more time that this is
the rule as it is currently taught in high school and college
courses and as it is applied by most major publishers throughout
the United States. Some people would say that the semicolon
followed by a coordinating conjunction is redundant. It would be
better, they say, to just drop the conjunction and use the
semicolon alone, since that serves the purpose more
efficiently.
If you’re really hung up on Occam’s Razor, fine; do
it that way. These same writers would probably never begin a
sentence with a coordinating conjunction; that rule is no longer
taught, and good writers often begin sentences with
and. My point is that the semicolon alone is
correct; but so is the semicolon followed by a coordinating
conjunction when one or the other of the clauses contains internal
punctuation or is long and complex (like this one).
Example: Occam’s Razor is the principle, first
formally stated by William of Occam, that the most efficient way
is always the best way; but Occam never had sex with me.
Example: While she continued to drive him crazy by
fondling his balls with her free hand, she began to suck on his
cock, until he came in a wild explosion of excitement; and then he
began to turn his own attention to her clitoris, which he had
neglected until then.
Using a comma instead of a semicolon in these example would be
confusing, because each half of the sentence already contains
commas. In the second example, a good author might instead just
insert a period and omit the and, especially if she
is concerned about skipping a period.
-
Use a semicolon to separate items in a series if these items
are long or contain commas.
Example: In one evening Sharon had sex
with Sue; her dog, Ralph; the night watchman, Bill; and Ray, her
ex-husband.
Using commas instead of the semicolons would
result in a confusing sentence, where we might think Sharon had an
even more active night:
In one evening Sharon had sex with
Sue, her dog, Ralph, the night watchman, Bill, and Ray, her
ex-husband.
Example: So far this week Bob has
sodomized the Bobbsey twins, Rachel and Randy; fucked Millie,
Alice, Patrice, and Carolyn in the hayloft; had oral sex with
Jane, Janet, Julio, and Billie Joe; and watched his sister have
nearly simultaneous sex with seven guys from the local gym.
Try reading this sentence with commas in the place of the
semicolons—and then remember that there are still four days
left in the week!
I myself still think writers do not need all four of these rules.
For over twenty years I have survived quite well using a semicolon
when a comma won’t quite do the job and when I don’t really want
the full stop indicated by a period. Even if you or your teacher
insists on knowing and using the four rules stated earlier, the
logic stated in the preceding sentence will make it easier to
remember and apply these more specific rules.
-
Some frequently misused words
-
- choose/chose
-
Choose is the present tense. It rhymes with snooze.
Chose is the past tense. It rhymes with hoes.
- its/it’s
-
it’s means it is; its means
belonging to it. This is a little bit illogical, because
normally an apostrophe shows possession. But not with
it.
its’ doesn’t exist.
- lose/loose
-
People lose things (including their virginity and
their tempers). When things are not tight, they’re
loose (which rhymes with goose).
- there, their, they’re
-
Use their to mean of them.
Example: I could see their pussies through
the hole in the wall.
Use there to mean over there or in that
place and in the expression there is.
Example: When I got there, she was
already undressed.
Example: There are lots of good stories
on
ASSTR
Use they’re to mean they are.
Example: They’re going to be
surprised at how good her pussy tastes.
Combined example of all three:
"They’re going to fuck their brains out when they get
there."
- to/two/too
-
Two is the number of persons most frequently present
in a meaningful sexual encounter. Too means
also, as in
I’d like to fuck you too.
Too also means excessively, as in
Sometimes I masturbate too often at the grocery
store.
To is a preposition, which means it comes at the
beginning of a prepositional phrase, as in
We went to the store.
or before a verb, as in
I want to fuck you.
- use/used
-
People get used to doing things. Likewise, Johnny
used to fuck Janie. Use is a present tense, as
in the song, Use me, abuse me…
- lie/lay
-
Lie means to recline. (It is an intransitive
verb—it cannot take a direct object.) Its past tense is
lay, and its perfect tense is lain. Of course,
a serious source of confusion is that lay (in addition to
being a word in its own right) is also the past tense of
lie.
lie also means to state a falsehood. This is a
completely different word that has a separate dictionary entry.
Its past tense is lied and its perfect tense is has
lied. (This meaning is easily understood and usually causes
no confusion. Its main relevance with regard to sex is its use in
poignant country western songs: She was sound asleep in our
double bed/And I let her lie.)
Lay means to put something (or someone) down. (It is
a transitive verb.) The past tense is laid. The perfect
tense is has laid.
The three most common problems with lie/lay are:
- using lie when you mean lay (and vice versa),
- using laid (instead of lay) as a past tense of lie, and
- using laid (instead of lain) as the perfect tense of lie.
Incorrect: We continued to lay in bed after our orgasms.
Correct: We continued to lie in bed after our orgasms.
Incorrect: I had been watching her lay in bed for nearly an hour before she woke up.
Correct: I had been watching her lie in bed for nearly an hour before she woke up.
Incorrect: She told me to lie the dildo on the night stand.
Correct: She told me to lay the dildo on the night stand.
Incorrect: After lying the dildo on the night stand, I fucked her brains out.
Correct: After laying the dildo on the night stand, I fucked her brains out.
Correct: After laying her in the hay loft, I went inside and laid her sister too.
(This is grammatically correct, but it may constitute a social
faux pas.)
Incorrect: I should have lain the key to the handcuffs out of her reach before I left the room.
Correct: I should have laid the key to the handcuffs out of her reach before I left the room.
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