A video-sharing platform for users to upload, view, and share videos across various genres and topics.
Service URL: www.youtube.com (opens in a new window)
GPS
Registers a unique ID on mobile devices to enable tracking based on geographical GPS location.
1 day
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE
Tries to estimate the users' bandwidth on pages with integrated YouTube videos. Also used for marketing
179 days
PREF
This cookie stores your preferences and other information, in particular preferred language, how many search results you wish to be shown on your page, and whether or not you wish to have Google’s SafeSearch filter turned on.
10 years from set/ update
YSC
Registers a unique ID to keep statistics of what videos from YouTube the user has seen.
Session
DEVICE_INFO
Used to detect if the visitor has accepted the marketing category in the cookie banner. This cookie is necessary for GDPR-compliance of the website.
179 days
LOGIN_INFO
This cookie is used to play YouTube videos embedded on the website.
2 years
VISITOR_PRIVACY_METADATA
Youtube visitor privacy metadata cookie
180 days
Yes.
All right, then.
Yes. I spent 4 months copy-editing 900 pages of systematic theology by an American author for British publication. Believe me, it does.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark#Punctuation
Personally, I have to say the British use is (as Wikipedia notes) more logical. The punctuation should not be inside the quotation marks if it wasn’t there in the original quotation. Quotation marks should indicate quoted material, including punctuation.
And if you agree with me, you can use that usage too – at least according to Wkipedia!
Phil, you may enjoy reading at the website Daily Writing Tips, where the authors and readers routinely discuss American English and grammar, and English English and grammar.
The internet has thrown us all together, and it has certainly created some sparks. English speakers from all over the world have congregated at DWT, and it is fun and educational.
Thanks, Deborah. Daily Writing Tips looks to be a high traffic site. I feel as if my grammar skills are slipping the longer I drift away from college.
Please correct me if I’m wrong, but shouldn’t the title be, “Bad Grammar, Spelling Kill”?
You’re right, Stonechurch. We’re saying that bad grammar and spelling kill, using the comma in the tradition of headline writers squeezed for space.
So, I should stop blogging or hire a team of editors to cover me.