1 / 9

DOL Notes

DOL Notes. End Marks and Correct Pronoun Usage. End Marks. An end mark is a type of punctuation placed at then end of a sentence. Period (.) Exclamation mark (!) Question mark (?) Use a period at the end of a statement. Tea is a popular drink.

chynna
Download Presentation

DOL Notes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DOL Notes End Marks and Correct Pronoun Usage

  2. End Marks • An end mark is a type of punctuation placed at then end of a sentence. • Period (.) Exclamation mark (!) Question mark (?) • Use a period at the end of a statement. • Tea is a popular drink. • Use a question mark at the end of a sentence that asks a question. • Did you see the exhibit on lightening? • Use an exclamation point at the end of a sentence that shows excitement. • What a high bridge that was! • Use either a period or an exclamation point at the end of a request or a command. • Please call the dog. • Call the dog!

  3. Review of Sentence Types • Declarative- a statement…uses a period • Interrogative-asks a question…uses a question mark • Exclamatory-shows excitement…uses an exclamation point • Imperative (command)-gives a command or request…uses a period or exclamation point if it is a strong command

  4. Abbreviations • Many abbreviations are followed by a period. • Personal Names • S. E. Hinton Livie I. Duran • Titles used with names • Mr. Mrs. Ms. Jr. Sr. Dr. • Organizations and Companies • Co. Inc. Corp. Assn. • Note that abbreviations for government agencies and other widely used abbreviations are written without periods. Each letter of the abbreviation is capitalized. • FBI YMCA TV PTO ABI

  5. Abbreviations cont. • Addresses • Ave. (Avenue) St. (Street) Rd. (Road) Blvd. (Boulevard) P.O. Box (Post Office Box) • States • Tex. (Texas) Ala. (Alabama) Tenn. (Tennessee) • Note that when states are abbreviated with two capital letters, they do not receive periods. • Example- AL (Alabama) GA (Georgia) • Times • A.M. (ante meridiem, from midnight to noon) • P.M. (post meridiem, from noon to midnight) • B.C. before Christ

  6. Notes for Abbreviations • A two letter state abbreviation such as FL (Florida) is only used after a zip code. • Orlando, FL 32819 • Abbreviations for units of measure written in lower case and do not receive periods. • Lb (pounds) oz (ounces) yd (yard) • The exception is in. for inches. It receives a period to avoid confusion with the word in. • When an abbreviation with a period ends a sentence, another period is not needed. However, if the sentence needs a ? Or !, the punctuation must be added. • We will arrive at 3:00 P.M. • Will we arrive before 4:00 P.M.? • We will have to up and ready by 5:00 A.M.!

  7. Subject Pronouns • A subject pronoun is used as the subject in a sentence or as a predicate pronoun after a linking verb. • Singular-I, you, he, she, it • Plural-we, you, they • Use a subject pronoun when the pronoun is a subject or part of a compound subject. • The Hope diamond has a fascinating history. • It has been bad luck for many owners. • You and he think the diamond is cursed. • The subject case is used for predicate pronouns. Predicate pronouns follow linking verbs and identify the verb’s subject. • The owner was he. • The buyers are you and she. • Common Linking verbs: is, am, are, was, were, been, has been, have been, can be, will be, could be, and should be.

  8. Object Pronouns • Object pronouns are used as direct objects, indirect objects, or objects of prepositions. • Singular-me, you, him, her, it • Plural-us, you, them • Direct object-receives the action of the verb and answers whom or what • The death of King Tut fascinatesme. • Indirect object-tells to whom or what or for whom or what an action is performed • Sally lentme a video on the topic. • I toldher the whole story. • Object of a preposition-pronouns following a preposition such as (to, from, for, against, by, about) • Will you save the video for them? • Always use object pronouns after the preposition between. • The secret is between you and me.

  9. Possessive Pronouns • Possessive pronouns is a personal pronoun used to show relationship or ownership. • Singular-my, mine, your, yours, her, hers, his, its • Plural-our, ours, your, yours, their, theirs • The possessive pronouns my, your, her, his, its, our , and their come before nouns. • No one saw the mummies in their colorful clothes. • The possessive pronouns mine, yours, hers, his, ours, and theirs can stand alone in a sentence. • The secret was theirs. Now it is ours.

More Related