Post
by LarryLatham » Sat Aug 13, 2005 10:02 pm
Nothing wrong with "President Jane Smith" or "President George Bush". When a title and a name appear in immediate sequence, there are two ways in which they can be related:
1. The title and the name are intended to comprise a single identity, so that, for example, "President George Bush" is meant to be taken together as the identifier of a definite unit. In this case, use of "The" would be redundant, and therefore unnecessary (even confusing), since it is already definite.
2. The title and the name are in apposition, which means that they are equal but different ways of saying the same thing, and have the same grammatical relationship to the rest of the sentence. In this case, commas are often used to set off the appositive expression, but not always:
"The President, George Bush, said Tuesday that..."
"The author Roald Dahl always hand-wrote his manuscripts on..."
In general, if the noun phrase is a formal title, commas are used. When the noun phrase is merely a discriptor, no commas are OK.
The decision about whether to use "The" to make the following noun phrase definite depends on whether it is already definite as it stands.
Larry Latham