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Published byHarley Satchwell Modified over 9 years ago
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punctuation
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commas Separate adjectives that come before a noun “They were attacked by a gigantic, ferocious shark”
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Commas continued - Set off a speaker from a quotation Jason said, “Those clowns look like they’re up to no good.” Set off phrases and words that introduce a sentence Even though he’s smart, he’s very lazy.
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Commas continued Set off words that are not necessary for the basic meaning of the sentence “Calgary, the 1989 Stanley Cup champion, has only one championship in their history.”
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Apostrophes Used for contractions (word shortening). “He’s (He is) a great player.” “I wouldn’t (would not) do that if I were you.” Used for possessives (shows ownership). “ Jason’s ipod has gone missing.”
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Apostrophes continued Exception to this rule: ITS – is a possessive (The dog wagged its tail.) IT’s – is a contraction (It’s (It is) a beautiful day.)
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Colons Introduce a list. Ex: The following students come to the office: Jason, Michael, Robert, and Harry. Introduce a formal quotation. Ex: The king leapt to his feet and said: “All of my people must obey!”
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Colons continued After the salutation of a formal letter (used to address people in an official manner). Ex: Dear Sir: I am writing to request information about...
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Semi-colons To separate items in a list that already use commas. Ex: The best cities in Canada are St. John’s, Newfoundland; Toronto, Ontario; and Edmonton, Alberta. Act as a period but shows a greater connection between sentences than a period does. Ex: Most of the students are here now; the rest are coming in the afternoon.
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Dashes (—) 1. Show a change in thought: “He went this way–no, that way.” 2. Show an interruption to the main idea “The Super Bowl—remember last year’s game?—is the most exciting part of January.”
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Dashes (—) 3. Sets off a summary of what came before as a list. “Campfires, dirtbiking and swimming—all part of a great summer.”
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Hyphens (-) Half as long as dashes 1.Used in some names: Terri-Lynn, Jean- Jacques, etc. 2. Used in some adjectives when they come before the noun A twenty-year-old man
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Quotation marks (“ ” or ‘ ’) Can be “double” or ‘single’ Used to show someone is speaking – Ex: “Hold on,” said Mark. Used to show sarcasm or insincerity. – Ex: He burned down my house and killed my dog! Some “friend” he turned out to be!
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Quotation marks continued Use single quotation marks inside of double quotation marks to prevent confusion – Ex:Mark said, “Some ‘friend’ he turned out to be!”
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parentheses () Not to be called “brackets”! Enclose extra material in a sentence. – Ex: John (if that’s his real name) seems to be a nice guy. Around letters or numbers in labeling. – Ex: For this assignment you will need (1) a sledgehammer, (2) a cabbage, and (3) all of Elmer’s School Glue you can find.
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ellipses (…) Three dots... not two, not four, not twelve, not a hundred. THREE Shows an interruption in dialogue. – Ex: “I don’t know if we can trust him if he’s... wait, is that him coming now?”
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Ellipses continued Identify incomplete thoughts – Ex: “He had to do something... but what?” Indicate that words have been left out of a quotation. – Ex: Original quote: “Someday, we, along with our fathers, mothers and children, will be free.” Quote with ellipses: “Someday, we... will be free.”
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HOMOPHONES Words that are sound alike, but have different meanings and spelling. Their, There, They’re – Their – relating to or belonging to people. Ex: The home team enjoys playing in their own arena. – There – referring to a place or location. Ex: Let’s sit over there. – They’re – they are. They’re going to a movie.
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HOMOPHONES To, Too and Two – To - indicates a place, person or thing that someone/thing is moving towards. Ex: Let’s go to the mall. – Too – means also or extreme. Ex: I like red too! Ex: It is way too warm out! – Two – refers to the number 2. Ex: I had two pieces of pizza for lunch.
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HOMOPHONES Its and It’s – Its – shows ownership. Ex: The giraffe showed off its long neck. – It’s – means ‘it is.’’ Ex: It’s going to be a long week.
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HOMOPHONES Through and Threw – Through – used to describe movement Ex: I walked through the hall. – Threw – past tense of ‘to throw’ Ex: I threw my water bottle in the recycling bin.
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