Walking along a pathway; I tripped and fell.
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A semicolon is used to separate two independent clauses in a sentence. A colon is used to introduce a list, explanation, example, or a quote.
A semicolon is a type of punctuation that is used when you want to join two independent clauses similar in topic. Example: I love dogs; they are so cute.
In order to separate distinct ideas into two different clauses a semicolon is sometimes used. The poor lady is bereaved; she must be devastated.
A semi colon is this sign here ";". It is used in a sentence for adding an extra piece of information at the end, for when a comma will not suffice. For example: Today, it rained; I played with the cat indoors.
Typically, the semicolon implies " and" and therefore using and after a semicolon is redundant.
semicolon ';' (Not applicable for block-statements)
A semicolon is used to join two independent clauses together. An example of two independent clauses joined together via semicolon is: "Baum's book is a political allegory; few people today would recognize the political events in this story."
Comma=After conjustion in a compound sentence Semicolon=Replaces a conjustion and a comma Comma Example I love pizza, and I love chesse. Colon Examples I love pizza; I love Chesse.
A colon is necessary when you want to emphasize something, establish a dialogue, start a list, or give clarity to titles. A semicolon is necessary when you need to give clarity to a series or indicate that two sentences are closely related to one another.
No, the word "and" should not follow a semicolon. Semicolons are used to separate independent clauses; if you want to include "and," it would typically be used within one of the independent clauses separated by the semicolon.
Why not? In this example there three semicolons, and one colon. for (i=0; i<10; i>3? i+=2: i++) printf ("%d\n", i);