this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2025
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I was taught it in school, have looked it up on Wikipedia, seen infographics, YouTube videos, etc., and yet I still do not know when to use those things. At this point I just refuse to purely out of fear.
Wikipedia has some examples; they are always super helpful in cases like this.
I've always done this one:
Between closely related [independent clauses].
(https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_clause "Independent clause") not conjoined with a coordinating conjunction, when the two clauses are balanced, opposed or contradictory:[23].
Basically you use them at points where you'd usually put a period, but you don't want to add as much of a pause.
ETA:
For example
could also be written as
but it wouldn't sound as nice.
While that may be true, you also put them in places that should have a comma, but you want more pause; this is why boiling it down to a single aphorism is difficult.
For example, I've read most of the comments in this thread, as well as the Oatmeal info-comic that someone linked, and I still don't know with certainty the semicolon I used above is grammatically appropriate.