Punctuation Point: Joining Independent Clauses
Erin Brenner
Builder of editing teams for small and growing businesses. ?? Advocate for conscious language. ?? Lover of ??, ?, ?.
Recently, someone asked me about joining two independent clauses to make a compound sentence. She thought such a sentence would need a comma, but she often found them missing. Today, we'll review how to join independent clauses.
First, a couple of definitions. A clause is a part of a sentence that contains a subject and a verb; it may or may not contain other words. An independent clause can stand as a sentence on its own because it contains a complete thought:
I ran.
Alternatively, a dependent clause does not contain a complete thought and can't stand on its own:
Although I was hungry
A compound sentence is two or more independent clauses (sentences) joined together:
领英推荐
President Obama and Korean President Lee failed to reach agreement on the Korean Free Trade Agreement (FTA) before a joint press conference in Seoul Thursday, but both leaders said the two sides will continue to work towards a final consensus in the near future.
What punctuation do you use between two independent clauses? You have a few options, depending on what parts of speech you use to join the sentences.
In The Copyeditor's Handbook, Amy Einsohn succinctly lays out the rules (IND stands for independent clause):
IND, coordinate conjunction IND. IND; adverb [,] IND. IND; transitional expression, IND. IND; IND. or IND: IND. or IND--IND.
For a deeper explanation and more examples, check out pages 78-79 of Einsohn's book.
Do you have more questions on joining clauses? Email me or leave a comment below.
Click “Subscribe” at the top of the page and get writing tips you can use every month!