Nib #84 Be Kind. Use the Oxford comma.
The “controversy” about the Oxford (or “serial”) comma is the dumbest in all of grammar nerddom.
Of course writers composing “a series of three or more terms,” should “use a comma after each term except the last” (Stunk & White).
Not because of some fussy old rule, but because it clarifies a sentence’s meaning to the reader!
“I was in a carpool with Bob, a butler and a hitman.”
does not mean the same thing as
“I was in a carpool with Bob, a butler, and a hitman.”
If you mean the second, you need the comma. Period. (Heh.)
There are lots of other fun examples. There’s the one about panda bears (“eats, shoots, and leaves”). And the one about Martha Stewart (“I love cooking my family and my pets”).
Ultimately, the case for the Oxford comma is no different than the case for capitalization or indenting paragraphs. They help readers understand what writers are trying to say.
Never forget the hard truth behind all writing tips: reading is hard.
And so, as Strunk & White put it: “the reader [is] in serious trouble most of the time, floundering in a swamp, and … it [is] the duty of anyone attempting to write in English to drain this swamp quickly and get the reader up on dry ground.”
The Oxford comma is not rigid. It’s not retrograde. It’s considerate, it’s kind, and it’s one of the things that separates us from the animals. Use it.
Until next week…
keep writing!











