How do you punctuate it?
i.e. "Who were they? And by that I mean, what were their positions?"
Comma, no comma? I've always done it as in my example, but I was just told by someone that they comma around "I mean" ~ arghh, seems minor, but I have an attorney who always says it, and I want to make sure I haven't been doing it wrong all these years!!
Stacy, I do it your way. I also have an attorney that uses that phrase a lot (I do electronic monitoring right now). If you set "I mean" off with commas, it changes the sentence and makes it cumbersome and perplexing (and I know there's not an English rule for "cumbersome and perplexing" but its still true. Ha!).
Thanks all! Yeah, I had never seen the commas around "I mean" and thought it very strange. I would never do it that way (really jarring to the eyes and hard to read), but I wanted to hear what others do.
Here's another one I had today. Interpreter depo and the atty would ask his question; it would be interpreted; usually a pretty good pause while waiting for the wit. to answer; then atty would say "approximately" ~ almost like a new sentence.
How would you put it i.e. ~ When did you get hired [pause] approximately?
I'm probably overthinking this one, but the wit. was very slow and after the first question was interpreted, it was almost like a new statement AND he did it constantly!
thanks!
Thanks, Marge. I needed a clear-headed answer. I've been reading "approximately" way too much and it started looking weird ~ could be b/c half the time b/c of the pause, I have it as an answer and then the real answer after that =)
hmm, that makes sense too, Brenda. The atty also said "or not" tons of times just like he did w/ the approximately ~ i think i need a break from this tript. But maybe I do need to do: Blah, blah ...? Or not? and blah ...? Approximately?