“Grubhub to pay $25M for ‘deceptive’ practices against customers, drivers” I’ve been seeing this quite a bit in news headlines. Does the comma replace an “&”? Is it just a weird clickbaity incomplete sentence thing?

  • protist
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    19 hours ago

    This is a literary device called asyndeton that is mostly used in oratory rather than in the written word, which is probably why it comes off a bit strange when reading it.

    • originalfrozenbanana@lemm.ee
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      9 hours ago

      Oh wow that’s fascinating. As soon as I read your comment it clicked that this is more natural as a part of speech than writing.