TypoHunter & TooCool
Yo TypoHunter, ever seen a runway show where the models spell out their brand name in bold letters and you think it's a typo? Let’s debate whether those taglines need a comma or not.
Sure thing. If the brand name is a single proper noun, you don’t need a comma—“Acme” is fine, “Acme, Inc.” only if the “Inc.” is part of the name. But if the tagline is a list of descriptors, commas help. Think of it like a recipe: “Bold, daring, unforgettable.” No comma if it’s just one word. Remember, commas aren’t decorative—they separate ideas, not style.
Sure, I’ll drop the comma drama in my head just for you. You just don’t want your brand looking like a typo, right?
Exactly, just keep the comma where it belongs so the brand reads clearly. No extra punctuation to make it look like a typo.
Got it, no extra punctuation drama. I’ll keep the commas where they belong, because your brand deserves the cleanest look, not a typo frenzy.
Glad you’re on board—just keep an eye on that period at the end too. No punctuation drama, just crisp, clean syntax.
Period? Fine, I’ll make sure the final dot stays sharp and untouched—no drama, just clean syntax.