EF_Kevin:
We so often see lists of three or more items, and there is no comma before the conjunction.
But actually, you are supposed to use one! I learned that from a book by Dianna Hacker.
Lin goes to school in England. They don't use the serial--or Oxford--comma there. Lin, I know that you are probably put off by that last comma ... when applying for American universities, I think that you are better off using it.
There was something about this sentence that was bothering me and I couldn't put my finger on it. I have figured it out now:
linmark:
Since third grade, I've played countless matches for the school, foundation, club and canton, and my school team has remained undefeated for four years now.
The punctuation, to an American's mind, gets a little muddled. I'd rewrite it like this: Since third grade, I've played countless matches for the school, foundation, club
[,] and canton
[;], and my school team has remained undefeated for four years now. It isn't that your construction is wrong, but putting in a serial comma and then a semi-colon will help the yanks.
linmark:
How about "indiscriminate power to bring people together"
I like that! Like Kevin said, "indiscriminate" conveys a far-reaching ability to transcend cultural barriers.
Eric Noto