Achaea Help Files
Achaea has hundreds of help files to you learn about Achaea. This is a copy of the in-game help file structure. HELP in-game will show you this same menu.
Achaea has hundreds of help files to you learn about Achaea. This is a copy of the in-game help file structure. HELP in-game will show you this same menu.
Punctuation: it's all those funny and not-so-funny marks in, near, and between words. Full Stop --------- Full stops are also called periods or dots. They usually end sentences. Three together may be called ellipsis or ellipses and means something has been left out. Two dots is nothing at all - except maybe sloppy. Dash or Hyphen -------------- Dashes or hyphens can combine words together, usually on the way to becoming one word. Good bye passed through good-bye on the way to goodbye, for example. Or so a drunk priest told me while waiting at a coach stop. Apostrophe ---------- Apostrophes are in trouble. People have started using them like glue to stick the s on the ends of words. Make's folk's hi's's in frustration! The big uses, proper uses, for apostrophes, were for contractions and possessives. In a contraction, you're leaving things out. Like "you're" - it's really "you are" with stuff left out. "It's" is a contraction too, for "it is." Possessives are like "Oxymandar's golden chalice" or "Harry's horrible hairpiece." Yes, "whose" is a possessive (interrogative), but it isn't "who'se" or "who's" - no matter how tempting the form may be. Comma ----- Commas fit in all over the place - in too many places if you ask me. Spare us all and try to use fewer. Or learn what an appositive is, and a dependent clause, and have a blast. Colon and Semicolon ------------------- Both are dying fast. Quick: try to use them before they're gone! I wanted one right about here; I'm not sure I succeeded. Just kidding! I did. Quotes ------ "Don't" use "quotes" for "emphasis." Every time you do, ten wonderful new words die a-birthing, and the virgins in paradise get headaches for an hour. Quote marks are for when someone else writes or says something, and you're reporting it (those with advanced intellectual skills may notice a suspiciously useful term here - you're "quoting" it!). Examples: the place is "closed" (or so he said); "Free advertising" was the title of the piece. Just have fun with it.
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