colon + passive voice
I got a couple of scientific articles to check the use of the colon in context. So, I am confused with the use of the colon in the following cases:
"The reason that IMRT and VMAT plans are different is that different tumors are treated: VMAT is used for stereotactic treatments of small tumors and IMRT for larger tumors."
"For the primary transmission Tprimary, measured with the EPID as a function of the (geometrical or radiological) thickness tij, the following model was used: "XMODEL "
The used of colon after the passive voice (i.g., "are treated", "was used") always trips me out. Any rule to get out of this problem?
PS. The text came from this article:
In aqua vivo EPID dosimetry
Markus Wendling,a) Leah N. McDermott,b) Anton Mans, I´gor Olaciregui-Ruiz,
Raul Pecharroma´n-Gallego, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Joep Stroom, Marcel van Herk,
and Ben J. Mijnheerc)
grammar passive-voice colon
New contributor
|
show 2 more comments
I got a couple of scientific articles to check the use of the colon in context. So, I am confused with the use of the colon in the following cases:
"The reason that IMRT and VMAT plans are different is that different tumors are treated: VMAT is used for stereotactic treatments of small tumors and IMRT for larger tumors."
"For the primary transmission Tprimary, measured with the EPID as a function of the (geometrical or radiological) thickness tij, the following model was used: "XMODEL "
The used of colon after the passive voice (i.g., "are treated", "was used") always trips me out. Any rule to get out of this problem?
PS. The text came from this article:
In aqua vivo EPID dosimetry
Markus Wendling,a) Leah N. McDermott,b) Anton Mans, I´gor Olaciregui-Ruiz,
Raul Pecharroma´n-Gallego, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Joep Stroom, Marcel van Herk,
and Ben J. Mijnheerc)
grammar passive-voice colon
New contributor
2
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
3
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
1
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
I got a couple of scientific articles to check the use of the colon in context. So, I am confused with the use of the colon in the following cases:
"The reason that IMRT and VMAT plans are different is that different tumors are treated: VMAT is used for stereotactic treatments of small tumors and IMRT for larger tumors."
"For the primary transmission Tprimary, measured with the EPID as a function of the (geometrical or radiological) thickness tij, the following model was used: "XMODEL "
The used of colon after the passive voice (i.g., "are treated", "was used") always trips me out. Any rule to get out of this problem?
PS. The text came from this article:
In aqua vivo EPID dosimetry
Markus Wendling,a) Leah N. McDermott,b) Anton Mans, I´gor Olaciregui-Ruiz,
Raul Pecharroma´n-Gallego, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Joep Stroom, Marcel van Herk,
and Ben J. Mijnheerc)
grammar passive-voice colon
New contributor
I got a couple of scientific articles to check the use of the colon in context. So, I am confused with the use of the colon in the following cases:
"The reason that IMRT and VMAT plans are different is that different tumors are treated: VMAT is used for stereotactic treatments of small tumors and IMRT for larger tumors."
"For the primary transmission Tprimary, measured with the EPID as a function of the (geometrical or radiological) thickness tij, the following model was used: "XMODEL "
The used of colon after the passive voice (i.g., "are treated", "was used") always trips me out. Any rule to get out of this problem?
PS. The text came from this article:
In aqua vivo EPID dosimetry
Markus Wendling,a) Leah N. McDermott,b) Anton Mans, I´gor Olaciregui-Ruiz,
Raul Pecharroma´n-Gallego, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Joep Stroom, Marcel van Herk,
and Ben J. Mijnheerc)
grammar passive-voice colon
grammar passive-voice colon
New contributor
New contributor
edited 1 hour ago
jorge
New contributor
asked 2 hours ago
jorgejorge
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11
New contributor
New contributor
2
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
3
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
1
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
2
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
3
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
1
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago
2
2
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
3
3
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
1
1
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
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2
Could you explain why you think that using a colon after a passive is a problem? There are ways to avoid the passive but using a colon does not necessitate these.
– Shoe
1 hour ago
3
This is perfectly grammatical. You will have to invent a rule of your own, and that rule will be a style rule.
– RegDwigнt♦
1 hour ago
1
@mRotten Both sentences are perfectly grammatical. The text before the colon is a complete sentence in both cases; there are no sentence fragments (unless you count XMODEL as a fragment). Apart from the fact that I have no idea what either sentence means, they both read as totally natural English, and I can’t see anything that would suggest they were written by a non-native speaker.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Jorge, can you state the two rules or say where you found them?
– Shoe
1 hour ago
@Shoe I am confused with the colon after the passive because this two rules: 1) When you use colons in sentences, the most important thing to remember is that colons must go after statements that are main clauses. Never use a colon after a sentence fragment; 2) Don't use a colon right after a verb. e.g., "The people I want to talk are: Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Bruce Willis." For the passive case, they used it after the verb. The rules came from this book: The ultimate writing guide for students - Mignon Fogarty.
– jorge
1 hour ago