Semicolon use is plummeting; most students don’t know how to use them

Summarised by Centrist

The semicolon is vanishing from British writing; it once connected complex thoughts with elegance and clarity. Now it hovers on the brink of extinction. 

A new survey by Babbel reveals its usage has dropped sharply; confusion appears to be the driving force.

In partnership with the London Student Network, Babbel surveyed UK students and analysed literary trends; the results point to a 50 percent decline in semicolon usage over two decades. 

In 1781, one appeared every 90 words; by 2000, that dropped to once every 205; today, you’ll find only one every 390 words.

The quiz, co-authored by linguist Lisa McLendon, tested real-world punctuation scenarios; students scored just 49 percent on average; over half didn’t know when to replace a comma with a semicolon.

Though only 11 percent said they use semicolons often, 67 percent believe they still have value; this suggests a hesitation to misuse rather than an outright dismissal. 

As Babbel’s Sofia Zambelli put it: “Our findings reveal that the semicolon is an ‘endangered’ punctuation mark; abandoned by many British writers who might have been expected to showcase its value; misunderstood by younger generations.”

Read more over at Babbel

Image: Mauricio Balvanera

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