Using Quotations Review

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Miss Gay English 7. Dialogue Dialogue is the exact words of a character. Dialogue is the exact words of a character. Use quotation.
Advertisements

Punctuating Dialogue Original Presentation by: Arlene Rodríguez Adapted by: Prof. Victor M. Vázquez.
Punctuating Dialogue Original Presentation by: Arlene Rodríguez Adapted by: Prof. Victor M. Vázquez.
Punctuation Rules English 6th Grade Olivia Edelman
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Punctuating Dialogue. Quotation Marks “” 1. Use quotation marks to signal when someone is speaking (direct quote). – Direct quote: “Isn’t Billy Dean the.
Incorporating Dialogue into Your Short Story. Say What? The Importance of Dialogue.
Dialogue How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Sight Words.
Punctuating Dialogue quotation marks. What’s wrong? My mother said, “go do your homework.”
Dialogue Rules Class Notes. Dialogue Rules Class Notes Examples: Ron told us that he would come to the movie later. My sister explained to me that calculating.
PUNCTUATING QUOTES AND DIALOGUE Make sure you have paper and a writing utensil to take notes!
mark went to see his mom, april, last june.
Montgomery Bus Boycott
Punctuating Quotations.
How can we become good learners?
Rules for using quotation marks
Using Quotations Review
…also known as an INDEPENDENT CLAUSE
Never make a mistake again
Punctuating dialogue:
Grades K-2 Reading High Frequency Words
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Giving Your Character and Story Life Through the Spoken Word
THE BEST THING IN THE WORLD
? Learning outcomes: by the end of the period you will be able to…
Quotation Marks Pg. 260.
Punctuation Rules English 7th Grade Ms. Kempner
Get off on the right foot and learn the key to writing effective leads
Dialogue Rules and Practice.
Tips and Rules for Writing Dialogue
TYPES OF CONCLUSIONS The conclusion (ending or closing) of your writing is what wraps it all up for the reader. Stop writing when you have said it all,
Using Dialogue in Narrative Writing
Writers give their work clarity by using proper conversations of writing. Readers can understand who is speaking properly formatted dialogue.
Punctuating Dialogue.
Fry Word Test First 300 words in 25 word groups
Never make a mistake again
Deshon (732) Jorge F (779) Edwin (734)
EQ: How do I use quotation marks when someone is speaking?
Rules for Writing Dialogue
Never make a mistake again
Wednesday, October 31 Homework: books & blue/black pen-tomorrow is the paragraph writing day! Bell- Ringers Wednesday: dialogue (1 paragraph) What do you.
Quotation Marks in Dialogue
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Never make a mistake again
Dialogue Basics.
Never make a mistake again
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
The. the of and a to in is you that with.
Journal What animal would judge us the most? Write a scene where two or more people are doing something silly, and they’re being observed and criticized.
The of and to in is you that it he for was.
Dialogue Rules.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Punctuating speech.
Unit 1 Good friends ENGLISH 湖北省黄冈中学英语多媒体课堂.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Writing Dialogue.
Never make a mistake again
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Punctuating Dialogue Mrs. Albright.
Make a new heading in your notes.
How to properly punctuate the words your characters speak.
Never make a mistake again
Dialogue Mini-Lesson.
Dialogue Get out paper to take notes!
Never make a mistake again
Presentation transcript:

Using Quotations Review Week 12 Using Quotations Review

Week 12 – Day 1 Using Quotations Write this down! Quotation Rule #1 – You can introduce the quote with a dialogue tag (like “he said” or “she wrote”). Put a comma between the dialogue tag and the quote, and capitalize the first word of the quote. In each example sentence, correct one capitalization or punctuation error (you do not need to write the entire sentence, just the correction): 1. A chess player once said “Victory goes to the player who makes the next-to- last mistake.” 2. The famous painter Pablo Picasso said, “give me a museum and I’ll fill it.” 3. “I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have” said Thomas Jefferson. 4. His jailer said “All right, get in there with the others.” 5. “My feets is tired, but my soul is rested” Mother Pollard announced. 6. He walked into the county courthouse, entered the sheriff’s office, and asked, “are you looking for me? Well, here I am.” 7. In her diary, Anne Frank wrote “Things are just as bad as you yourself care to make them.” Wordplay – Just for fun! The root word “-scope- ” means “see or watch.” How many words can you list that contain this root?

Week 2 – Day 2 Using Quotations Quotation Rule #2: If you introduce a quote with a complete independent clause (like “My mom told me something very important”), put a colon between the quote and the independent clause and capitalize the first word of the quote. In each example sentence, correct one capitalization or punctuation error (you do not need to write the entire sentence, just the correction): Blake rose from the driver’s seat and called out again: “y’all better make it light on yourselves and let me have those seats.” 2. The leaflet urged the black community to support the boycott, “Don’t ride the buses to work, to town, to school, or anywhere on Monday.” 3. Walt Disney enjoyed a challenge, “It’s kind of fun to do the impossible.” 4. Napoleon Bonaparte made a wise statement: “never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.” 5. Guitarist Jimi Hendrix had a deep thought “Knowledge speaks, but wisdom listens.” 6. Martin Luther King taught an important truth “The time is always right to do what is right.” Wordplay – Just for fun! The vowel combination “ew” almost always makes the sound found in “chew.” List as many words as you can that contain “ew.”

Day 3: One way to use a quotation is to make it part of your own sentence by using the word “that” (Martin Luther King believed that “the whirlwinds of revolt will continue to shake the foundations of our nation until the bright day of justice emerges.”) You can also include just a small part of a quote in your sentence. When you do this, you don’t need a comma and you don’t need to capitalize the first word of the quote.   In each of the following sentences, find the error that needs to be corrected: But as the weeks passed, he began to realize that, “many of the threats were in earnest.” He scolded them for acting like cowards, for backing down like “Little boys.” They expressed regret that: “this unfortunate incident has taken place in our city.” Grover Hall called the wholesale arrests “The dumbest act that has ever been done in Montgomery.” That meant that the so-called, “taxicab army” with its emergency ten-cent-a-ride fare would no longer be available. If a dialogue tag interrupts a quote, use commas around the dialogue tag, but do not capitalize the second part of the quote. In each of the following sentences, find the error or errors that needs to be corrected: “Roses are red,” she recited, “Violets are purphlish…” “Next week,” the librarian whispered “you should read this book.” “On page fifty-seven” Mrs. Jones said “you’ll find the problems you need to do for homework.”

Day 4: In each sentence, notice the highlighted part Day 4: In each sentence, notice the highlighted part. Write a punctuation or capitalization rule that explains why the highlighted part needs to look the way it does:   President John F. Kennedy said, “And so, my fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” John F. Kennedy’s first speech as President of the United States contained a memorable quote: “Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” You should always remember President Kennedy’s advice to “ask what you can do for your country.” “And so, my fellow Americans,” President Kennedy said, “ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” Kennedy said, “And so, my fellow Americans… ask what you can do for your country.” The president told his listeners that they should “ask what [they] can do for [their] country.”