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REVIEW OF GRAMMAR Wrighting good meens you got to follow all the ruls; like speling, good, propper, punctuashun and coreckt grammar.

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Presentation on theme: "REVIEW OF GRAMMAR Wrighting good meens you got to follow all the ruls; like speling, good, propper, punctuashun and coreckt grammar."— Presentation transcript:

1 REVIEW OF GRAMMAR Wrighting good meens you got to follow all the ruls; like speling, good, propper, punctuashun and coreckt grammar.

2 WHY THE FUSS? CREDIBILITY: How can a person’s work be considered believable if that person is so ignorant as to be unable to write correctly?

3 WHY THE FUSS? ACCURACY: A misspelled word, a misplaced comma, or a missing verb can change, hide, or confuse the meaning of a sentence.

4 WHY THE FUSS? EFFICIENCY: A document that requires much effort to decipher simply will not be read. Likewise, the message of a speaker who is difficult to hear or follow will simply be ignored. In both cases, the effort is a waste.

5 WHAT ARE THE CRITERIA? Spelling –Use a spell checker or a dictionary –Use a proof reader Punctuation –Use a ___________

6 MORE CRITERIA Grammar and structure –Use a ___________ Format –Use a ___________

7 PAGE FORMATTING Use a cover sheet and NO PLASTIC COVERS! Staple pages at upper left hand corner Use FLUSH LEFT justification (ragged right)

8 MORE PAGE FORMATTING Double CHARACTER space between sentences Double LINE space within paragraph TRIPLE line space between paragraphs Margins: L=1.5”; R, T, & B=1.0”

9 STILL MORE FORMATTING: Page Numbers “Front Matter” (title page, table of contents, abstract, acknowledgements, and preface) – the pages preceding the text- are numbered using lower case Roman numerals.

10 STILL MORE FORMATTING: Page Numbers The first page of text is page 1, but the page number is not printed. Others are printed, centered at the bottom of the page preceded by your name, a comma, a space, Page, and the page number.

11 SPELLING Poor spelling reveals the writer’s ignorance for all the world (or the person[s] the writer is trying to convince/impress/educate) to see. USE A SPELL CHECKER!

12 SPELL CHECKERS Can’t find properly spelled- but misused- words (homonyms). For example, using the word “there” when you mean “their” is both a spelling error and an inappropriate word selection – a grammatical error!

13 PUNCTUATION Period Ends sentence and most abbreviations Decimal point URL & E-Mail delimiters

14 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Question mark –Direct, but not indirect (rhetorical) questions –In parentheses to indicate uncertainty (?)

15 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Exclamation point Comma Semicolon –As conjunctions with adverbs. –Separates independent clauses. –Separates items in a series that contain internal commas.

16 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Colon –Following the salutation in a letter. –Following the date, to, from, and subject headers in a memorandum. –To separate a statement from its following amplifier.

17 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Quotation marks –Periods & commas stay within. –Colons & semicolons stay outside. –Exclamation and question marks may be either in or out, depending whether it is a part of a quotation.

18 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Quotation marks- cont. –Enclose titles of articles, book chapters, poems, and unpublished reports.

19 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Use quotation marks to enclose verbatim phrases of less than fifty words. –Verbatim phrases of fifty or more words should be set off by indenting as an entire paragraph five spaces and using single line spacing.

20 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Apostrophe Ellipses –3 dots (…), each separated by a character space. –Purpose?

21 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Italics Parentheses Brackets Dashes

22 PUNCTUATION (CONT.) Hyphen Slash Capital v. lower-case letters Numbers

23 GRAMMATICAL ERRORS Sentence fragments Comma splice Fused sentence Choppy sentences Faulty coordination

24 MORE GRAMMATICAL ERRORS Faulty subordination Faulty agreement—subject & verb singular/plural Dangling modifiers Faulty parallelism

25 MORE GRAMMATICAL ERRORS Inappropriate word choices Words that sound similar (almost like homonyms), but have quite different meanings.  Idea (a thought) vs. Ideal (a standard of perfection).

26 DOCUMENTING SOURCES (CITATIONS) The APA Manual is the standard for documentation formatting. Language Skills Handbook (2 nd edition), covers most of the bases.

27 MORE YET ON SOURCE DOCUMENTATION The primary factor in formatting citations and referencing is to be consistent. Nonetheless, the appropriate format should be used.

28 THE END


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