The End of the Road … For the Semi-Colon?!?!

#semi-colon #prideandperjury #historicalfiction

Eek!!!!! Is this the end of the road for the semi-colon??? And, if it so, do we care? The Guardian newspaper (see below for link) was this week sounding its death-knell. In brief, usage in the UK has plummeted. (“Its usage in English books plummeting by almost half in two decades – from one appearing in every 205 words in 2000 to one use in every 390 words today… 67% of British students never or rarely use the semicolon.”) Figures in the US are doubtless lower still. 

Of course, semi-colons are mostly used, either for joining two full sentences together, for flow, or for separating clauses already comma-ed (and yes, I do know comma-ed is not a word, but if P.G. Wodehouse can make up words, well hey, so can I!) My husband’s seriously academic book, Music in Edwardian London – whose editor was (coughs) me – is absolutely crammed with them. Though I’m not saying we didn’t fight over a few. However, that’s an important academic tome, where even colons abound, and not a word of fiction in it. In these days of illiteracy, predictive text, and general lack of interest in formal writing, the semi-colon – adored by Jane Austen – is still probably going the way of the stegosaurus. 

Now I’ve thought long and hard about this, and – like the Oxford comma – I don’t think it actually adds anything. Nor is the absence of semi-colons likely to annoy novel-readers.  As, for some, the super-modern method of writing dialogue without using quotation marks annoys, as seen in major prize-winners such as Cormac McCarthy. Here is an example of this punctuation, featuring a brief dialogue between myself and my mother. 

  • I don’t think much of the Oxford comma.
  • Wash your mouth out with soap.

I certainly can’t see JAFF writers relinquishing quotation marks! But, returning to my point (and yes, a semi-colon does have one) it’s pretty undeniable that (a) the em-dash is truly where the action is in 2025 and (b) a few Austen-loving readers might do a double-take were they to sight a semi-colon in the wild. It’s even possible, should a curious reader crack open the first few pages of a novel, that a single semi-colon, to which they had never been properly introduced, might tip the scales against a sale. While a reader is most unlikely, in 2025, to demand a refund due a lamentable shortage of semi-colons.

Is there an opposing point of view? There is. If the semi-colon was good enough for Austen… then… then… Also, some of us remain the offspring of (a) a noted biographer and (b) a professional editor and you don’t recover easily from a lifelong blow like that, lol.

Speaking personally, if I cracked open the first few pages on Amazon.co.uk and stumbled across a properly-used semi-colon in a regency fiction, it’d be a modest bonus for me. I’d think I was in the hands of someone pretty seriously literate, and I’d be far likelier to read their novel. I’d  also admire the nerve of an author who dared tiptoe a step closer to Austen than I have, myself. But… I still try to avoid using them. And I’ve never yet been dissed in a single review for avoiding them, either. 

Now this is pretty daring, but… hey, I am fearless. Here is a famous extract from Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, chapter 3, the sentence in which the Bennet girls attempt to entrap their father into describing Mr Bingley. And what do we have? A triple whammy! Three semi-colons in a single sentence! Even for Austen, this is pretty crazy. (My emphases in bold.)

They attacked him in various ways; with barefaced questions, ingenious suppositions, and distant surmises; but he eluded the skill of them all; and they were obliged to accept the second-hand intelligence of their neighbour Lady Lucas.

Now, explain to me – in words of one syllable, for I am a simple soul – what’s so cool about all these semi-colons, compared with my edited version below? I know which version is the easier to read.

They attacked him in various ways – with barefaced questions, ingenious suppositions, and distant surmises – but he eluded the skill of them all. They were obliged to accept the second-hand intelligence of their neighbour Lady Lucas.

In other words, my personal guess is that the semi-colon will pass with my mum’s generation, except with regard to lesser-spotted academic tomes. It’s even possible that the recent fuss over the demise of the semi-colon will eventually be classed as a storm in a Regency teacup. So where are you with the semi-colon? Pro? Anti? Or ambivalent? Let me know!!!

That Guardian link: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/may/18/marked-decline-semicolon-use-english-books-study-suggests#:~:text=A%20study%20suggests%20UK%20authors,in%20every%20390%20words%20today.

XXAlice

PS In breaking news, my Pride and Perjury, despite being almost semi-colon-free, just won gold in European fiction in the famous Independent Publishers Book Awards (the IPPYs). A national Selfies finalist, it also took the (only) silver medal in the well-known, all-genre SPR Book Awards in April. It’s also a current finalist for both Foreword Indies’ “Book of the Year” AND the Hawthorne Prize (American Writing Awards).

In other words, don’t believe people who say that a volume of short stories can’t succeed. I almost believed them – but this is now my most successful book, whoop whoop.

PPS I also scribble a provocative and amusing monthly newsletter. Sign up for it here: https://www.alicemcveigh.com/newsletter/

PPPS If interested in classical music and/or Edwardian society, here is my husband Simon’s latest book: https://boydellandbrewer.com/9781837651603/music-in-edwardian-london/

10 responses to “The End of the Road … For the Semi-Colon?!?!”

  1. BARRY STUART RICHMAN Avatar

    Alice McVeigh for VP! Fantastic approach on the semi colon. Language is a living, breathing organism. What is a noun last century is a verb in this one; slang last decade is offensive today. I am ALL in on the ’em dash’ and proud to take this stance (not to say I will dust off a semi colon here and there, just to remind myself of the past).

    1. Alice McVeigh Avatar
      Alice McVeigh

      Thanks so much, Barry. confess to loving semi-colons too, for old times’ sake (Dickens, Wilkie Collins and Thackery as well as Austen). Nostalgia is a powerful feeling! But ‘the times change and we change with them’… XAlice

  2. Alice McVeigh Avatar
    Alice McVeigh

    The font as altered my dashes here to dots. Should be:

    – I don’t think much of the Oxford comma.
    – Wash your mouth out with soap.

    1. Alice McVeigh Avatar
      Alice McVeigh

      should be ‘has altered’. Also: Thackaray. The first thanks to predictive text. The second thanks to carelessness.

  3. Ginna Avatar

    Writing dialogue without using quotation marks is now a thing? I had no idea! I’ve come across it in some JAFF, and wondered what the hell is wrong with those people?! I find it annoying, and it’s also very difficult to read.

    1. Alice McVeigh Avatar
      Alice McVeigh

      It’s ‘A Thing’ and not even a new thing (except, I’d imagine, in JAFF….) I first found it in Roddy Doyle’s Booker Prize-winning work of genius (PADDY CLARKE HA HA HA, winner in 1993!!!). I found Doyle’s Irishness and depiction of teenage feelings both fantastic and funny BUT I disliked the modern style of dialogue and moaned about it in my review. (As I said, that was ’93!!! I had to look it up. I couldn’t believe it was over 30 years ago.)

      By the time I met McCarthy’s outrageously brilliant writing, maybe 2015, the modernist style of dialogue didn’t bother me much. These days I can go with the flow in modern fiction. Losing a few semi-colons seems pretty minor in comparison.

  4. cindie snyder Avatar
    cindie snyder

    I don’t know. I agree you really can’t read without punctuation marks! It would be difficult.

  5. Kirstin Odegaard Avatar

    Congratulations, Alice!
    I also avoid semicolons, but only because I feel like I’m supposed to; secretly, I love them and feel they have their place.
    Also, my students love to do this:
    I like skateboarding, however, my friends don’t.
    I mean, it’s a run on. It needs a semicolon. Just sayin’.

    1. Alice McVeigh Avatar
      Alice McVeigh

      I beg leave to disagree. YES, it’s a run-on. No question!

      But it doesn’t necessarily require a semi-colon. This is fine, cleaner, easier on the eye and very much more modern-looking:

      I like skateboarding – however, my friends don’t.

  6. Riana Everly Avatar

    I, I must admit, am a fervent fan of the semicolon. Like all punctuation, they have their place, to link separate sentences that are more parts of a single thought, despite having two separate main verbs, much like the psychical link said to bond identical twins. They are separate but indelibly linked, two parts of a whole. But they have their place, and I find they better suit historical fiction than contemporary fiction.
    However, I am always up for a hearty discussion about punctuation.

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