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sumit commented on the word comash
"The novelist Will Self: 'Prose has its own musicality, and the more notation the better. I like dashes, double dashes, comashes and double comashes just as much.' Comashes? A search in books found only a historical reference to an export from the Levant, which may have been a type of stocking or stocking material; a Web search was almost as unrewarding but did find a note that a comash is a comma followed by a dash: “,—�?. Its name is so rare we may presume Will Self invented it. The stop was once common in English prose, going back at least to the First Quarto of Shakespeare’s Othello, printed in 1622 (“I’le tell you what you should do,— our General’s wife is now the General�?). It could appear in pairs to mark a parenthesis (hence double comashes) where we would now use just a pair of dashes. Its usual name is comma dash."
April 14, 2008
bilby commented on the word comash
Good god of grievous funktuation.
April 15, 2008
sarra commented on the word comash
Will Self is a consummate arse! I delight in this. To a point.
April 15, 2008
yarb commented on the word comash
I like Will Self, and I love that quote. But comash still sounds like a road-building material to me.
April 15, 2008
reesetee commented on the word comash
It's probably used to construct pierelles.
April 16, 2008
bilby commented on the word comash
Hmmm. I'd stab at comash being a culinary offering of unknown pedigree, a sort of bubble-and-squeak bitzer.
April 16, 2008