*An "'appositive "'( in many but not all grammar books ) follows, expands on, and acts as the same most American style guides, at least ).
32.
If the English relative clause would have a copula and a noun, in Hawaiian an appositive is used instead : " Paul, an apostle " instead of " Paul, who was an apostle ".
33.
For example, one can use a colon after an independent clause to direct attention to a list, an appositive or a quotation, and it can be used between independent clauses if the second summarizes or explains the first.
34.
On the other hand : " Nagy Elem�r d�szpolg�rnak " to Elem�r Nagy honorary citizen the whole structure takes one suffix at the very end, thus it cannot be appositive, and no comma is used.
35.
The article lacks the indicators of accomplished writing such as absolute phrases and appositives and shows a poor understanding of the correct usage of finite and indefinite articles ( " the ", " a " and " an " ).
36.
I have a question about what you might call geographic appositives-putting a city's location immediately after its name, for example " Boston, Massachusetts ", " San Francisco, California ", " London, England " or " Paris, France ".
37.
All style guides state that, if a comma is used before, a matching comma must appear afterwards if the sentence continues acting as an appositive, much like commas after dates in MDY format ( MOS : DATEFORMAT ) and after city state combinations ( MOS : COMMA ).
38.
I would use no colon if I simply wanted the sentence to " highlight " that it has three subjects ( appositives ) for the verb " were " ( which is the verb " to be " ) . talk ) 20 : 19, 29 February 2016 ( UTC)
39.
Luca Serianni, an Italian scholar who helped to define and develop the colon as a punctuation mark, identified four punctuational modes for it : " syntactical-deductive ", " syntactical-descriptive ", " appositive ", and " segmental ".
40.
Kanon also has an unfortunate fondness for the tardy appositive _ " He stood up and began to cross the room, a swimmer, people sweeping past him like water " _ and the clumsy synecdoche _ " Colonel Muller, whose silver hair moved through the crowd as he introduced people ."