Examples
;Billy-bob, a great singer, was not a good dancer.:The phrase ''a great singer'', set off by commas, is both an appositive and a parenthesis. ;A dog (not a cat) is an animal that barks.:The phrase ''not a cat'' is a parenthesis. ;My umbrella (which is somewhat broken) can still shield the two of us from the rain.:The phrase ''which is somewhat broken'' is a parenthesis. ;Please, Gerald, come here!: ''Gerald'' is both a noun of direct address and a parenthesis. ;People who eat broccoli are typically healthier—and happier—than people who don't.: The phrase ''and happier'', set off by dashes, is a parenthesis.Types
The following are examples of types of parenthetical phrases: *Introductory phrase: ''Once upon a time'', my father ate a muffin.''Garner's Modern American Usage'', (Oxford: 2003, p. 655) *Interjection: My father ate the muffin, ''gosh damn it''! *Aside: My father, ''if you don't mind me telling you this'', ate the muffin. * Appositive: My father, ''a jaded and bitter man'', ate the muffin. *Absolute phrase: My father, ''his eyes flashing with rage'', ate the muffin. *Free modifier: My father, ''chewing with unbridled fury'', ate the muffin. *Resumptive modifier: My father ate the muffin, ''a muffin which no man had yet chewed''. *Summative modifier: My father ate the muffin, ''a feat which no man had attempted''. Within each example sentence, the parenthetical phrase is the portion that is displayed in an ''italic font''. It is called a "parenthetical" phrase even when it is not delimited by any brackets (such as round – r square– brackets).References
Rhetoric Grammar Punctuation {{rhetoric-stub