RangerWickett
Legend
I'm currently re-editing Natural 20 Press's Tournaments, Fairs, & Taverns for its 2003 print release, and I'm noticing that all the parts written by Russell Morrissey and Peter Ball (a Brit and an Aussie) use a different style of comma-usage in sequences.
For example, I would say: "You see before you a troll, a gazebo, and a portable bathroom."
They would say: "You see before you a troll, a gazebo and a portable bathroom."
Note that they use one less comma in a sequence than I do. I was taught that, in a series, you but a comma after each item in the series. I'm thinking that, maybe in British locales, they were taught to not use commas between the last two items in the series. I mean, it just seems wrong to me to say: "In Tournaments, Fairs and Taverns you'll find several new games (including greased pig wrestling), revised rules for Bahly and a brand new festive location."
Am I just making stuff up, or is this a legitimate difference in punctuation? Heck, can we even agree on whether it's Tournaments, Fairs, & Taverns or Tournaments, Fairs and Taverns? To me, this is quite vexing.
For example, I would say: "You see before you a troll, a gazebo, and a portable bathroom."
They would say: "You see before you a troll, a gazebo and a portable bathroom."
Note that they use one less comma in a sequence than I do. I was taught that, in a series, you but a comma after each item in the series. I'm thinking that, maybe in British locales, they were taught to not use commas between the last two items in the series. I mean, it just seems wrong to me to say: "In Tournaments, Fairs and Taverns you'll find several new games (including greased pig wrestling), revised rules for Bahly and a brand new festive location."
Am I just making stuff up, or is this a legitimate difference in punctuation? Heck, can we even agree on whether it's Tournaments, Fairs, & Taverns or Tournaments, Fairs and Taverns? To me, this is quite vexing.