Because it's a simple statement like any other, not a special compiler directive compound statement that introduces a block. You need to put a semicolon after it whenever you'd need to put a semicolon after any simple statement. See perlsyn:

Simple Statements The only kind of simple statement is an expression evaluated for its side effects. Every simple statement must be terminated with a semicolon, unless it is the final statement in a block, in which cas +e the semicolon is optional. (A semicolon is still encouraged if the b +lock takes up more than one line, because you may eventually add another line.) Note that there are some operators like "eval {}" and "do {}" that look like compound statements, but aren't (they're just TERMs i +n an expression), and thus need an explicit termination if used as the la +st item in a statement.

Update: Fixed up terminology as per replies, below

-xdg

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In reply to Re: eval with semicolon by xdg
in thread eval with semicolon by mosh

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