The Colon: A Sentence Gateway

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© Capital Community College The Colon: a sentence gateway The colon comes at a point in the sentence where the sentence could come to a complete stop.
Advertisements

The Colon: a sentence gateway
PUNCTUATION MADE EASY San Jose State University Writing Center.
“She said what?” YOUR GUIDE TO PUNCTUATING DIALOG.
© Capital Community College The Colon: a sentence gateway The colon comes at a point in the sentence where the sentence could come to a complete stop.
Punctuation & Grammar., ?; :’!., ?; “” :’!., ?; “” :’!
Using Colons. Colons Announce Things They announce rules and explanations Remember this: College grads earn 72% more than high school grads The wires.
Second Grade: What is a sentence
ACT Grammar Lesson More PUNCTUATION. Semicolons (;) Punctuation marks used to put two or more clauses together to form one big sentence. Falls somewhere.
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.
Unit: Memoirs and Mechanics
Punctuations.
Every year hundreds of thousands of students study punctuation...
© Capital Community College The Colon: a sentence gateway The colon comes at a point in the sentence where the sentence could come to a complete stop.
AVOIDING RUN ON SENTENCES Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.
Using Colons. Colons Announce Things They announce rules and explanations Remember this: College grads earn 72% more than high school grads The wires.
AVOIDING SENTENCE FRAGMENTS Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.
© Capital Community College The Colon: a sentence gateway RULE #1 Between hour and minute. It is 7:15.
© Capital Community College The colon comes at a point in the sentence where the sentence could come to a complete stop. I’m going to tell you the names.
The Colon: A Sentence Gateway Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.
Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar
My grammar page by: fizzy flick By: Fizzy Flick I changed my name and the first letter of the sentence to a capital to make it a proper noun. A noun is.
ELA8C1 The student demonstrates understanding and control of the rules of the English language, realizing that usage involves the appropriate application.
LATEST PUNCTUATION CHECK RULES: UPDATE Punctuations can be your friend or enemy. Depending on how you use them, may change the entire meaning of.
Literacy Focus Colons A colon consists of two dots, one above the other : Marking code: P for punctuation.
Grammar 2 The Second Semester Kinds of Sentences Presented by Dr. Mohamed Sha’at.
mark went to see his mom, april, last june.
The Colon: a sentence gateway
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
Identifying Independent & Dependent Clauses
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
Editing Protocol Writing.
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
ACT English Punctuation.
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
Basic Building Blocks: Clauses and Phrases
Commas, Semicolons; Colons:
How to Integrate Quotes in Literary Analysis
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.
San Jose State University Writing Center
Coordinating Conjunctions
Grammar Slammer: Commas, Ellipsis, & Dashes
The Colon: a sentence gateway
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
Parts of Speech Review Commas
The art of styling sentences
Punctuation- It’s kind of important 
Run-on Sentences.
Coordinating Conjunctions
Parts of Speech Review Commas
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
The Colon: a sentence gateway
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
The Simple Sentence Kansas Writing System.
The Colon: a sentence gateway
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
AVOIDING SENTENCE FRAGMENTS
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
The Mighty APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used--
The Colon: a sentence gateway
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
The Colon: a sentence gateway
I can tell the products of 6’s facts
AVOIDING RUN ON SENTENCES
Avoiding Run-on Sentences, Comma Splices, and Fragments
THE MIGHTY APOSTROPHE The apostrophe is used:
The Colon: a sentence gateway
1. Comma’s 7. Adverbs 9. Proper nouns 3. Colons 11. Bibliography
Adapted from Real Good Grammar, Too by Mamie Webb Hixon
Presentation transcript:

The Colon: A Sentence Gateway Adapted by Algonquin College from content provided by Capital Community College and Professor Charles Darling.

Colons & Lists The colon comes at a point in the sentence where the sentence could come to a complete stop. I’m going to tell you the names of my favourite breakfast foods. We could even put a period after the word “foods,” couldn’t we? In fact, we did. We know, however, what’s going to come after this period. That’s right, a LIST of breakfast foods…

Colons & Lists I’m going to tell you the names of my favourite breakfast foods: meuslix, cornflakes, oatmeal, grits and gravy, and yogurt on toast. The proper punctuation mark to set off this list from what precedes it is a colon. The colon announces that a list is about to follow; it is the gateway to that list. My favourite breakfast foods are meuslix, cornflakes, oatmeal, grits and gravy, and yogurt on toast. Would I use a colon in the sentence above? No, because the sentence does not come to a halt here. Instead, the sentence flows right into the list. A colon would not be appropriate here.

Colons & Explanations Examine this next sentence carefully. Our math tutor wants just one thing from us that we try our best. Here, we have an independent thought (ending with “us”), followed by another kind of completer (a noun clause). To set off this completer, this explanation, we can use a colon. Our math tutor wants just one thing from us: that we try our best. These are the two main uses of the colon: to set off a list or an explanation that we know is about to follow the main part of the sentence.

Colons & Formal Quotations We also use the colon to set off a formal quotation. My father was always using his favourite quotation from Yogi Berra: “It ain’t over till it’s over.” Just remember that you usually know what is going to follow a colon: a list, an explanation, or a formal quotation. You have now mastered the uses of the colon, a very handy device in the punctuation of your sentences. You can now review the colon and other punctuation marks in the Guide to Grammar and Writing.