Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Oxford commas clarify meaning.
I would like to thank my parents, God, and Principal Smith
vs.
I would like to thank my parents, God and Principal Smith.
Yes, use it in those rare cases, but 99% of the time it makes no difference to the meaning of a sentence.
Using an Oxford comma when it isn't necessary is dumb, stupid, and nerdy.
Using an Oxford comma when it isn't necessary is dumb, stupid and nerdy.
Well, I agree that OP should pick one and not worry about it. But to me, these two are not interchangeable. They're close, but the former presents a list of equally weighted adjectives, while the latter makes a single statement (it's dumb), with the second and third adjectives expansions of the meaning of "dumb." I can see using both, but they wouldn't mean the same thing.
On the issue of the oxford comma, I am annoying, meticulous, and precise.
On the issue of the oxford comma, I am annoying, meticulous and precise.
(yeah, in this case the latter's closer).