comma vs dash

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Tan Elaine

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1. Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.

2. Friends, Romans, countrymen -- lend me your ears.

Is it better to use a comma or a dash after 'countrymen'?

Thanks in advance..
 
I consider the comma to be correct.

Rover
 
I would use a semicolon.
 
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I would use a semicolon. The sentence already has commas serving in another role.
 
I would not use a semicolon as 'Friends, Romans, countymen' is not a clause.

Rover
 
[QUOTE=Rover_KE;651346]I would not use a semicolon as 'Friends, Romans, countymen' is not a clause.

Rover[/QUOTE]

That doesn't matter, in my opinion.

'I visited Cologne, Germany; Vienna, Austria; and Barcelona, Spain.'
You can't just have a string of commas. The commas need help in making it clear that you are talking about cities and countries.
 
1. Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.

2. Friends, Romans, countrymen -- lend me your ears.

Is it better to use a comma or a dash after 'countrymen'?

Thanks in advance..

I bet Shakespeare used a dash, if he used anything at all ;-) But as you'll have noticed, Tan Elaine, opinions differ. All the opinions so far have quietly ignored the dash - which looks fine to me (though not really in a monospaced font, which doesn't distinguish between an en-dash and a hyphen).

b
PS To produce a proper en-dash in Word, hold down <ctrl> and type the hyphen on the mini-keypad; if you have a laptop, then you can do something with the <Fn> key, but life's too short.
 
Thanks to all the members who have replied to my post.:-D
 
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