The Oxford Comma – Why and Why Not (2024)

(deborahcourtbooks.com)

31 points | by taubek 5 hours ago ago

53 comments

  • EuanReid 4 hours ago

    There are so many times the Oxford comma prevents ambiguity. I have yet to see a counterexample. Commas separate list entries, don't change it for the last one.

    • n4r9 2 hours ago

      Wikipedia has an interesting example where it's still ambiguous:

        They went to Oregon with Betty, a maid, and a cook.
      
      It's not clear whether Betty is the maid. But tbh removing the comma doesn't help either.

      Personally if I wanted to indicate that Betty was the maid I would put "a maid" between brackets or hyphens.

      • hellojesus an hour ago

        Or just switch the order if Betty is the maid and you don't want to provide additional context:

        ``` They went to Oregon with a cook and Betty, a maid. ```

      • an hour ago
        [deleted]
      • rawgabbit 2 hours ago

        If Betty was the maid and the cook, I would write...

             They went to Oregon with Betty who was a maid and a cook.
        
        
        If it was three people, I would write...

             They went to Oregon with Betty, the maid, and the cook.
        • kstrauser an hour ago

          The maid implies there was just one. Who travels with their only maid? Who will keep the manor lights on?

        • mmooss an hour ago

          > They went to Oregon with Betty, the maid, and the cook.

          Betty could be the maid. English meaning depends partly on word order:

            They went to Oregon with the maid, Betty, and the Cook.
          
          Still ambiguous.

            They went to Oregon with the maid, the cook, and Betty
            They went to Oregon with the maid, the cook and Betty
          
          In the former, I suppose the maid might be the cook also. The latter moves more easily and with less ambiguity.
      • luxuryballs 2 hours ago

        “a maid and cook.”

        “a maid, and cook.”

      • dheera 2 hours ago

        This sounds like a case where we should just change the syntax. If Betty is the maid it should be written:

            They went to Oregon with Betty [a maid], and a cook.
        • 1659447091 an hour ago

          This is how I was taught. Use ( ) or -- -- here and the Oxford comma for list of 3 or more.

          I get lazy with adding the comma before the "and" in list, and without fail I hear my grandmother/father/teachers pointing out how wrong I am for doing so. Same for my use of semicolons followed by "and" or "but".

          I never realized the Oxford comma was even something up for debate.

        • dullcrisp 2 hours ago

          (They (went (to Oregon) (with ((Betty (a maid)) and (a cook))))).

          ((That (is (the (most natural) syntax))) and ((all (of us)) (should (switch (to it))))).

          • thom 2 hours ago

            Many years ago working on natural language to SQL, when we had ambiguities this is how we’d clarify things with the user (albeit with the minimal amount of brackets necessary).

      • forgetfreeman an hour ago

        As written it is perfectly clear that Betty is neither the maid nor the cook, neither of whom the author bothered to name in this sentence. If that wasn't the author's intention they should grammar better.

        • an hour ago
          [deleted]
      • GoodJokes 2 hours ago

        [dead]

    • bennettnate5 an hour ago

      It's common in English writing to interject additional details in on a noun by using a phrase separated with commas. I've personally found Oxford commas can in certain cases make it unclear whether you're interjecting or not, like so:

      Alice, the cook of the house and the guest were very chatty that evening.

      Alice, the cook of the house, and the guest were very chatty that evening.

      In the second, is Alice the cook of the house or not? This is the ambiguity of Oxford commas.

      • function_seven an hour ago

        If you’re one to omit the Oxford comma in your writing, then how do I resolve the ambiguity in your first example?

    • stephencanon 3 hours ago

      "I'd like to thank my mother, Ayn Rand, and God" is the usual example.

      Yes, you can reorder the list to remove the ambiguity, but sometimes the order of the list matters. The serial comma should be used when necessary to remove ambiguity, and not used when it introduces ambiguity. Rewrite the sentence when necessary. Worth noting that this is the Oxford University Press's own style rule!

      • alistairSH 3 hours ago

        I always heard this one...

        We invited the strippers, JFK, and Stalin to the party. [three groups invited - strippers, a president, and a premier]

        We invited the strippers, JFK and Stalin to the party. [the president and premier are strippers]

        Very different visual conjured by those two sentences.

        • comprev 2 hours ago

          "John helped his uncle, Jack off a horse"

          "John helped his uncle Jack off a horse"

          Two very different outcomes...

          • h4ch1 2 hours ago

            shouldn't there be another comma after Jack?

            John helped his uncle, Jack, off a horse.

            Because while speaking it I only pause after uncle and "Jack off a horse" together next. feels like there should be another pause after Jack?

        • PaulDavisThe1st 2 hours ago

          I'd prefer:

          We invited the strippers, JFK and Stalin, to the party [two strippers, named JFK and Stalin]

          if the goal is to minimize ambiguity.

          • al_borland 2 hours ago

            I can see it being tiresome to read text where the author is continuously interjecting clarification with brackets.

            • PaulDavisThe1st an hour ago

              The square-bracket clarifications here are meta-text designed to absolutely clarify the intended reading of the preceding text, so that the reader can contrast their understanding with the intended one.

              There is no suggestion that one would do this in "regular" text.

        • Avshalom 2 hours ago

          I mean first off: no the exact same image is conjured because we are reading this in context of knowing who jfk and stalin are and we know they aren't strippers and all language is contextual.

          That said:

          We invited the stripper, JFK, and Stalin to the party.

          We invited the stripper, JFK and Stalin to the party.

          The supposed ambiguity is back. Although again there is no ambiguity to the reader. The juxtaposition of the two versions wouldn't work as a joke if there was any ambiguity

        • robertoandred 2 hours ago

          If JFK and Stalin were strippers, there’d be a comma after Stalin to denote the parenthetical clause.

      • Joker_vD 2 hours ago

        Just put the colon there if you need to introduce a list, it's one of its functions. "I'd like to thank: my mother, Ayn Rand and God". The same goes for that "two strippers" example: "We invited the strippers: JFK and Stalin, to the party".

        • mmooss 33 minutes ago

          I want you to know that I would only write this in a discussion nitpicking about grammar: :)

          > "I'd like to thank: my mother, Ayn Rand and God".

          A colon should not connect a verb and its objects; generally you need an independent clause before the colon (i.e., a clause that could be a complete sentence). One could properly say,

            I'd like to thank the following: My mother, Ayn Rand and God.
          
          Also, these examples leave ambiguity. Your mom could be Ayn Rand, and if she was, then you might very well think she was God, or be making a joke about it.

          > "We invited the strippers: JFK and Stalin, to the party"

          Nope. A colon isn't a parenthetical in the middle of a sentence; that is, you can't continue the sentence after a colonic phrase (there's no such thing so I made up that term :D ). And again, the clause before that colon is not an independent clause. One can use parentheses (of course) or em dashes for parenthetical phrases:

            We invited strippers (JFK and Stalin) to the party.
            We invited strippers - JFK and Stalin - to the party.
          
          A proper colon might be as follows:

            We invited strippers to the party: JFK and Stalin!
          
          But I'd put an em dash there (and to heck with LLMs and their em dash overusage).
    • t0mek 3 hours ago

      Only tangentially related (but hey, it's HN) - I'm so happy about the support/requirements for trailing commas in the modern language syntax:

          x = [
            123,
            456,
            789,
          ];
      
      It makes editing such a list so much easier. Also, the commit diffs are cleaner (you don't need to add comma to the last element when appending a new one).
      • echohack5 2 hours ago

        The oxford comma debate is so annoying because it clearly has nothing but advantages. Removing commas from a delimited list does nothing to resolve ambiguity, whether lexicographically or syntactically.

        It's so useful as a delimiter and anti-ambiguity machine, that you don't even need spaces for it to work! See CSV or Japanese.

        • mmooss 31 minutes ago

          > The oxford comma debate is so annoying because it clearly has nothing but advantages.

          .. if you care only about data communication and have no sense of beauty, aesthetics, rhythm or personality in writing.

      • Izkata 2 hours ago

        My very first programming language doesn't use commas:

          x: [
            123
            456
            789
          ]
      • black_knight 2 hours ago

        I like this:

            x = [ 123
                , 456
                , 789
                ]
        • tommy_axle 2 hours ago

          Nah, prepending will lead to a messier diff than the parent example.

        • 2 hours ago
          [deleted]
    • ajdude 2 hours ago

      My heroes are my parents, Superman and Wonder Woman!

  • happytoexplain 3 hours ago

    Spoilers: There is no "why not" in the article (aside from "tradition").

  • gxd 2 hours ago

    I banned the Oxford comma in all writing within my individual business. In fact, I released an entire 100K+ word narrative game without using Oxford commas (I consider it a bug if I left any behind).

    • card_zero 2 hours ago

      I use it religiously just for shits, and giggles.

      • culi an hour ago

        The Oxford Comma is not used with just two items. This is just improper grammar.

        I mean you do you but don't call this the Oxford Comma.

  • leemelone 3 hours ago

    It is important to use the Oxford Comma because it is commonly accepted, fits with tradition, and is just correct.

    • PaulDavisThe1st 2 hours ago

      .. and in your example, unnecessary.

      Or maybe I missed the joke.

      • bluGill an hour ago

        It is necessary because of Tradition.

        I reject the validity of other traditions. Also: repent and join my religion.

  • smitty1e 2 hours ago

    There is a book "Eats Shoots and Leaves" that gets at the importance of knowing when (and when not) do deploy the punctuation:

    https://www.amazon.com/Eats-Shoots-Leaves-Tolerance-Punctuat...?

    I also enjoy how meaning of a whole sentence can be inverted by a bit of punctuation:

    a. "A woman without her man is nothing."

    b. "A woman: without her, man is nothing."

    • joosters 2 hours ago

      Lionel Hutz

      Works on contingency

      No money down

      Always the best example for missing punctuation!

  • 3 hours ago
    [deleted]
  • semiversus 4 hours ago

    You mean "Why, and Why Not"

    • cosmotic 3 hours ago

      You'd only use the Oxford comma when the list is 3 or more items.

  • exacube 3 hours ago
  • mjuarez 2 hours ago

    obligatory xkcd: https://xkcd.com/2995/

  • voxaai 2 hours ago

    [dead]

  • an hour ago
    [deleted]