justplainjane47-tc-create-1 (#423)

Edit 'translate/figs-ellipsis/01.md' using 'tc-create-app'

Edit 'translate/figs-ellipsis/01.md' using 'tc-create-app'

Edit 'translate/figs-ellipsis/01.md' using 'tc-create-app'

Edit 'translate/figs-ellipsis/sub-title.md' using 'tc-create-app'

Created 'translate/figs-ellipsis/01.md' using 'tc-create-app'

Co-authored-by: justplainjane47 <justplainjane47@noreply.door43.org>
Reviewed-on: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_ta/pulls/423
This commit is contained in:
Richard Mahn 2020-12-09 12:45:20 +00:00
parent deda0a1e77
commit 98400c62a2
2 changed files with 2 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -8,9 +8,6 @@ There is ellipsis in the second part because “nor sinners in the assembly of t
> > So the wicked will not stand in the judgment, nor **will** sinners **stand** in the assembly of the righteous.
English has a punctuation symbol which is also called an ellipsis. It is a series of three dots
(…) used to indicate an intentional omission of a word, phrase, sentence or more from text without altering its original meaning. This article is not about the punctuation mark, but about the concept of omission of words that normally should be in the sentence.
#### Two Types of Ellipsis
1. A Relative Ellipsis happens when the reader has to supply the omitted word or words from the context. Usually the word is in the previous sentence, as in the example above.

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@ -1 +1,2 @@
What is ellipsis?
 What is ellipsis ? ([^1])