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Published byMoris Fowler Modified over 8 years ago
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Don’t Float Your Quotes! H ow to use blended quotations effectively in your writing
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Effectively incorporating quotations into writing can be tough! Sometimes writers leave quotations “floating” or unattached to a sentence which causes confusion and usually results in a loss of meaning or focus.
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An effective way to use quotations is to blend them into your sentences… One way to support a key idea in your analysis is to include words and phrases from a piece of literature. These words and phrases (or quotations) do NOT have to be dialogue from a character.
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Gomez realizes that her grandmother taught her not only how to swim but that she should be “proud of [her] large body” and “African hair,” and this lesson has allowed her to gain “control over [her] own life” as a strong independent woman. …in the middle
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When you blend a quotation into a sentence, be sure that the quoted material fits grammatically into the sentence. For example, be sure that what you end up with is a complete sentence and not a sentence fragment.
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“The sea,” she learned, “a fearful place” for her African ancestors. What’s wrong with this sentence? It’s missing a VERB! The sentence should be written as… “The sea,” she learned, was “a fearful place” for her African ancestors.
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Blended Quotation Practice For each sentence below, blend the quotation and the sentence on your own paper. You do not have to use all the words in a quotation, but you should pick out the KEY words and phrases that emphasize the point you are trying to make. MAKE SURE YOUR SENTENCE IS A COMPLETE SENTENCE! 1.SentencePoe uses sensory details to create a feeling of terror. Quotation“His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness….”
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2.Sentence Edgar Allan Poe uses comparisons for description. Quotation“old man’s heart” and “sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton.” 3.SentenceIn “The Tell-Tale Heart,” Poe immediately establishes the narrator as troubled. Quotation“nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous”
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