Library of Formatting Examples:Italics/23A: Difference between revisions

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{{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Italics/22A|next=Italics/23B|cat=Italics}}
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{{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=101-23A.png|iw=40|tw=45}}
{{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=101-23A.png|iw=45|tw=45}}
  bottle like that shepherd's boy; and, in an instant, it hurried
  bottle like that shepherd's boy; and, in an instant, it hurried
  me along through my no very short life of adventure, of toil,
  me along through my no very short life of adventure, of toil,
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sentence, the ending phrase, or just the word "ditches"? Unless it's clear that the
sentence, the ending phrase, or just the word "ditches"? Unless it's clear that the
"bang" goes with the word, put it '''outside''' the markups. (And, this is from the same
"bang" goes with the word, put it '''outside''' the markups. (And, this is from the same
book as an earlier example, where many sentences ended with exclamation marks.)
book as an [[Library of Formatting Examples:Italics/21B|earlier example]], where many sentences ended with exclamation marks.)
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Latest revision as of 12:31, 27 December 2025

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101-23A.png

Correctly formatted text

bottle like that shepherd's boy; and, in an instant, it hurried
me along through my no very short life of adventure, of toil,
of peril, of pleasure, of ardent friendship and not less ardent
enmity; and after filling me with wonder, that a heart and mind
so wrapped up in everything belonging to the gardens, the
fields and the woods, should have been condemned to waste
themselves away amidst the stench, the noise, and the strife of
cities, it brought me <i>to the present moment</i>, and sent my mind
back to what I have yet to perform about Nicholas Grimshaw
and his <i>ditches</i>!

Ownership of punctuation

This is ambiguous: did the author use the exclamation mark to emphasize the entire sentence, the ending phrase, or just the word "ditches"? Unless it's clear that the "bang" goes with the word, put it outside the markups. (And, this is from the same book as an earlier example, where many sentences ended with exclamation marks.)