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  • Could the Semicolon Die Out? Recent Analysis Finds a Decline . . .
    The work found that the use of the semicolon in English language books has long been declining, culminating in a dramatic drop in the last 20 years, according to a statement from the company
  • Semicolons are becoming increasingly rare; their . . .
    A recent study has found a 50% decline in the use of semicolons over the last two decades The decline accelerates a longterm trend: In 1781, British literature featured a semicolon roughly every
  • Semicolon Usage in British Literature Drops Nearly 50% Since . . .
    Semicolon usage in British literature has declined from once every 205 words in 2000 to once every 390 words today, representing a nearly 50% drop, according to analysis commissioned by language learning company Babbel The punctuation mark appeared once every 90 words in British literature from 1781, making the current frequency the lowest on
  • Is The Semicolon Dying? Find Out How Well You Know This . . .
    New analysis from Babbel uncovers a stark decline: semicolon usage in British English books has fallen by nearly 50% in the past two decades In fact, historical data shows this decline stretches back centuries In 1781, British literature featured a semicolon roughly every 90 words; by 2000, it had fallen to one every 205 words
  • Semicolon Usage Drops Dramatically, New Research Reveals
    A new study shows that semicolon usage has dropped dramatically over the past 25 years Commissioned by Babbel and supported by grammar expert Lisa McLendon, the research highlights a decrease in frequency from once every 205 words in 2000 to once every 390 words today Decline in Semicolon Usage Among British Students
  • Marked decline in semicolons in English books, study suggests
    But to paraphrase the semicolon-supporting Twain, reports of “useful little chap’s” death might have been greatly exaggerated: Google Books Ngram Viewer, which includes novels, nonfiction, and even scientific literature, shows that semicolon use in English rose by 388% between 1800 and 2006, before falling by 45% over the next 11 years
  • It’s all over for the semicolon which has had its future . . .
    THE semicolon is at risk of dying out because young people do not know how to use it correctly, research suggests Once a central part of punctuatio­n, the semicolon has almost halved in popularity over the past 20 years, according to the makers of language app Babbel


















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