Grammar and the Subject
Which is the “proper” syntax:
- Now, obviously, Johnny may still not throw it to you, but it was an attempt.
- Now, obviously Johnny may still not throw it to you, but it was an attempt.
- Obviously Johnny may still not throw it to you, but it was an attempt.
Likely #3. but why do we all tend towards #1? Likely because we early-21st-century-ers are more about communicating how *I* speak (subjective, personal idiosyncrasies) than aligning with the Objective Grammar. Post-Modernism is all about the Death of the Object and Rise of the Subject.
“*I* would have said the sentence with pauses, so THAT is why *I* put commas in.”
Again, which is more important? Communicating clearly (per the norm of Modernistic Rules) or communicating SELF? Do we all display our psychological dependencies of personal acceptance through simple grammar?
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