Does Cred Forums use the Oxford comma?

Does Cred Forums use the Oxford comma?

Consider the following sentence:
>Work-family conflict is caused by a multitude of factors, but the literature identifies the following salient ones: hours worked, the nature of the work, cultural climate, perceptions of pay and gender.

Is work-family conflict caused by
1. hours worked
2. the nature of the work
3. cultural climate
4. perceptions of pay and gender

or is it caused by
1. hours worked
2. the nature of the work
3. cultural climate
4. perceptions of pay
5. gender

You can probably interpret the right answer, but it took you a while, didn't it? A fraction of a second at most, but still just a moment.

Now consider the exact same sentence, but with one extra comma:
>Work-family conflict is caused by a multitude of factors, but the literature identifies the following salient ones: hours worked, the nature of the work, cultural climate, perceptions of pay, and gender.

Isn't that much clearer?

So next time you're writing something, don't forget about the Oxford comma. Because you know who does forget about it? Googles. And you wouldn't want to be a filthy goog, would you?

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=P_i1xk07o4g
twitter.com/SFWRedditImages

no comma before the but

Curse you!

RIGHT DOWN THE ROAD; CANT MISS IT

>not using the butt-coma

no

my ass is numb

>perceptions of pay and gender

Is correct if one is correlating the two.

>For breakfast I had: Tea, bacon, eggs, toast and jam.

Yes, but then it would be cultural climate and perceptions of pay and gender instead of just cultural climate, perceptions of pay and gender.

There's no comma, because it's really "perceptions of gender"

Misgendering shitlords pls go

It's 2016 user, perception of gender is a thing.

Commas deny people their gender.

>asking grammar questions to a multinational audience.

You're retarded, but yes

...

Work-family conflict is caused by a multitude of factors, but the literature identifies the following salient ones: hours worked, the nature of the work, cultural climate and perceptions of pay and gender.

This, thread, is, fucking, cancer; deal, with, my, commas, nigger.

And or but negate the need for a comma.
Use a comma instead of and or but you mongoloid.

>defacing the English language
Typical burger.

Better yet:

Hours worked, the nature of the work, cultural climate,perceptions of pay and gender; all these factors have been identified as the salient factors in the literature.

t.oxford scholar.

youtube.com/watch?v=P_i1xk07o4g

That's silky smooth, but I'm still like my Oxford commas.

That's not better, just more complex.

bazinga

Only if you were correlating all three of those.

>Tea and sugar and milk.

Is not the same thing as

>Tea and sugar, and milk.

Who cares honeslty, like, this shit is the worst, yo.

I comma, however, the fuck I wanna comma.

>For breakfast I had: Tea, bacon, eggs and toast with jam.

ez

>bumping a thread irrelevant to politics
Typical kangaroo

Wrongn image, but it works, since OP licks abo assholes.

Why the fuck would you mix toast and jam with your eggs? Then leave your bacon off to the side? The fuck is wrong with you?

what you lot call Oxford comma is generally considered to be default in my native ortography

sometimes I feel like Polish utilises too much commas, especially when you notice that we don't really have any agent-related issues due to declension

On a sidenote, this is probably my favourite sentence from the thing I'm reading:

>The other direction of work-family conflict, family-work conflict, is more straightforward.

Better, but two 'factors' is redundant.

I ate at a cafe that had Bacon jam that went well with everything.

>I ate at a cafe
Well la-dee-dah, Mr Continental.

Who gives a fuck about an oxford comma?

>orthography
>declension
>
>
>
>too much commas


R U using an online thesaurus m8? Because those are some quite fancy words considering how badly you're fucking up some of the basics.

This.