My editor recommends a space after, but I think this is only when you're starting another sentence, right? When you're just breaking up a sentence, like someone stammering in dialogue, you don't need spaces? It just looks funny with them.
I like the fourth period approach, but oddly that appears to be possibly nonstandard except in the case of quoting text. When trailing off, it's way less clear. Unfortunately most of the style guides I've seen seem to take a "La la la I'm not listening" approach to dealing with the trail-off ellipse, so there's very little good information to go on.Carol Davis said:And it might be proper style, but I never put a fourth period after the ellipses, at the end of a sentence. The way I look at it, the ellipsis takes the place of the whole end of the sentence, including the period. And it looks weird. So I don't do it.
Some style guides say so, but others don't. The Associated Press Stylebook says to put proper sentence-ending punctuation (period, exclamation point, question mark) before the ellipsis, with a space in between. ie Will you come? ...ElHawk said:A lot of people don't know that when you end a sentence with an ellipsis, you need proper sentence-ending punctuation (period, exclamation point, question mark) after the ellipsis.
I never thought about this, but I don't think it is true. I exported this into a mobi and viewed it with several hardware viewers:Ronny K said:For formatting purposes, make sure you're using an actual ellipsis (one character) and not just three periods. Three periods can result in the periods being broken up on two lines, which is awkward, ugly, and unprofesh.
You always want a space on ellipses. Technically, it's space, period, space, period, space, period, space with whatever punctuation you'd normally have. Unfortunately, that spacing tends to play havoc with eBooks, as does three periods (...).
Best fix I've found is to let Word do its single character ellipsis (type three dots in a row to get this - you'll know it "took" because the kerning will shift a bit and if you use the arrow cursor keys, one tap of the key will go to the beginning or end of the entire ellipsis). You want to "attach" the ellipsis to the word preceding it so that it remains on the same line, and then space after the ellipsis if there's another word following - no space if punctuation.
Doing it that way ensures that you won't have lines that display on the Kindle like this:
"So much of our lives together is what you wanted. Not me. I felt . .
. superfluous a lot of the time."
Or
"So much of our lives together is what you wanted. Not me. I felt
… superfluous a lot of the time."
and also that there's not a huge hunk of white space at the end of a line.
The joys of variable fonts
Also, make sure there's a comma if there's a dialog tag: "Where are…," she asked.
If it's NOT a complete sentence, it does not take a period. Sometimes, however, you do have a complete sentence, in which case punctuate as normal.
You actually don't need a period if it's an incomplete sentence, which is often the case with ellipses.ElHawk said:A lot of people don't know that when you end a sentence with an ellipsis, you need proper sentence-ending punctuation (period, exclamation point, question mark) after the ellipsis.
Hmm. Interesting. I haven't actually seen it, but I have it (or thought I had it) on very good authority. It could be an obscure scenario, or it could be false. I still use the ellipsis entity, just in case.Domino Finn said:I never thought about this, but I don't think it is true. I exported this into a mobi and viewed it with several hardware viewers:
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And each line always ended in a dash. This means MOBI files don't break up periods. What software do you see that does?
Cherise, punctuating that way implies that Will you come? is complete and that there is then missing text after that question, not that the person trailed off. Context is important when deciding how to punctuate, especially since ellipses can be used for multiple purposes.Cherise Kelley said:Some style guides say so, but others don't. The Associated Press Stylebook says to put proper sentence-ending punctuation (period, exclamation point, question mark) before the ellipsis, with a space in between. ie Will you come? ...
That's true but the AP was never intended for fiction, but for newspapers. In newspapers, an ellipsis is normally used to show an omission in a quote, not to show faltering speech as in fiction.Cherise Kelley said:Some style guides say so, but others don't. The Associated Press Stylebook says to put proper sentence-ending punctuation (period, exclamation point, question mark) before the ellipsis, with a space in between. ie Will you come? ...
Anne, I agree with your blog post. You more or less came to the same conclusions as I did. It's nice to see other writers doing the same thing, because my editor was REALLY against it!Anne Victory said:Domino, mobi files absolutely do break up three periods across lines, though not the ellipsis character.
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