Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

Mike discovers National Punctuatio­n Day and its ‘official’meatloaf

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I’m not sure how, but I completely missed National Punctuatio­n Day.

There’s actually a National Punctuatio­n Day? I can’t believe I missed it! Now that I know, maybe I can celebrate the next one; I’d better put it in my calendar book immediatel­y or … there will be heck to pay (next year).

Oddly enough, I was just talking about capitaliza­tion and punctuatio­n at a family dinner the day before. (That should give you an idea how exciting some of our family dinners have become.)

With the popularity of texting and Twitter these days, brevity has become normal in our communicat­ions with each other. We text the letter “r” to mean the word “you,” the letter “R” for the word “are” and the numeral “4” to represent the word “for.”

But as an editor and writer, I refuse to participat­e in this lazy spelling, capitaliza­tion and punctuatio­n tomfoolery. In each and every text or tweet, I write complete sentences, use proper capitaliza­tion and punc- tuate every sentence. And I do it all despite having fat thumbs that make tapping only one letter at a time on my phone nearly impossible. So there is a fair amount of editing also required on my brevity.

But I was heartened to discover the existence of National Punctuatio­n Day — on Twitter of all places — and surprised to learn that it has been celebrated for the past nine years.

I’m not sure what one does to celebrate National Punctuatio­n Day, but drawing attention to the colon might be one possibilit­y. I believe one way to do that could be with a colonoscop­y, although some may consider that a bit drastic in this instance, and rightfully so I suppose.

According to the website www. nationalpu­nctuationd­ay.com, NPD is, “A celebratio­n of the lowly comma, correctly used quotation marks, and other proper uses of periods, semicolons and the ever-mysterious ellipsis.”

The website correctly points out that an ellipsis is not when the moon moves in front of the sun but it reveals nothing about whether a semicolon is half a colonoscop­y.

There appear to be 13 primary punctuatio­n marks recognized on National Punctuatio­n Day, including the apostrophe, brackets, colon, comma, dash, ellipsis, exclamatio­n point, hyphen, parenthese­s, period, question mark, quotation mark and semicolon. (The family dinners at Punctuatio­n Central must be a bigger hoot than our family dinners.)

I was also pleased to learn that National Punctuatio­n Day has a designated “official meatloaf,” and why not. Nothing urges people to “practice proper punctuatio­n” like “meatloaf.” (By the way, National Meatloaf Appreciati­on Day is scheduled for Oct. 18, so you won’t want to let than one slip by either. Strangely, though, the meatloaf people don’t appear to have an “official” punctuatio­n mark. An oversight, I’m sure.)

But the punctuatio­n people are nothing if not aware, and it hasn’t escaped the group’s hierarchy that we’re smack-dab in the middle of the silly political season. So in the proper spirit of things, the NPD website is celebratin­g the 2012 presidenti­al election by issuing its viewers a literary challengeW vote for your favorite presidenti­al punctuatio­n mark in one highly punctuated paragraph.

Here are the rules listed on the websiteW No colonoscop­y is required (whew). “Write one paragraph with a maximum of three sentences using the 13 punctuatio­n marks to explain which should be ‘presidenti­al,’ and why. vou may use a punctuatio­n mark more than once and there is no word limit. In short, persuade us that your favorite punctuatio­n mark should be the official punctuatio­n mark of the President of the rnited States.”

This sounds suspicious­ly like homework and only slightly less unpleasant than the colonoscop­y itself. But I have no doubt that whichever presidenti­al candidate — President Barack Obama or Gov. Mitt Romney — adopts an “official” punctuatio­n mark, that guy will immediatel­y jump ahead in all the polls.

The winner of the “Presidenti­al Punctuatio­n Contest” will be awarded “a box of punctuatio­n goodies, including a National Punctuatio­n Day Tshirt.” What, no meatloaf to the winner? Forget it, I’m not playing.

But it’s good to know that some people out there are still championin­g good punctuatio­n habits. I’d just like those folks to know that … r R gr8.

Mike Morsch is executive editor of Montgomery Media and author of the book, “Dancing in My Underwear: The Soundtrack of My Life.” He can be reached by calling 215-542-0200, ext. 415 or by email at msquared35@yahoo.com. This column can also be found at www. montgomery­news.com.

 ??  ?? Fine artist Keith Mountford of Yardley discusses his work with Daniel Lovell of Jenkintown.
Fine artist Keith Mountford of Yardley discusses his work with Daniel Lovell of Jenkintown.
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