1 / 15

Comma Use and Abuse

Comma Use and Abuse. Renn Lugent Ryan Ritchie Shane Sprayberry Brandi Harrison. What is a Comma?. A valuable punctuation device that separates sentences to make them more manageable. Use of Commas. To separate three or more elements in a series.

spyridon
Download Presentation

Comma Use and Abuse

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. Comma Use and Abuse Renn Lugent Ryan Ritchie Shane Sprayberry Brandi Harrison

  2. What is a Comma? • A valuable punctuation device that separates sentences to make them more manageable.

  3. Use of Commas • To separate three or more elements in a series. • Example: Fred's dog-like-girlfriend is short, hairy, and drooling.

  4. Use of Commas • With conjunctions (the “fanboys”: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) to combine independent clauses into a sentence • Example: Joe woke up next to his girlfriend, but he did not recognize her after a long night.

  5. Use of Commas • To set off an introductory phrase, clause or word. • Example: Fortunately, the opening pitch didn’t count.

  6. Use of Commas • To separate part of a sentence that is not necessary or to add extra details. • Example: Eleanor, his wife of thirty years, was a severe pain in the neck.

  7. Use of Commas • To separate coordinate adjectives, a series of modifiers describing the same noun. • Example: Joe has a tall, hairy, brown-haired girlfriend.

  8. Use of Commas • To use as an opening for a quoted phrase. • Example: Carl says, “I like french-fried taters.”

  9. Use of Commas • To express ideas that contradict each other • Example: Some say the world will end in fire, not ice.

  10. Use of Commas • Typographical Reasons • Between City and State (Newport News, VA) • Between a Date and a Year (June 29, 2007) • Between a title and a name when the title comes after the name (Rick Dollieslager, Professor of English) • In long numbers (19,278,340,192,372)

  11. Abuse of Commas • Don’t split the subject from verb by unnecessary use of a comma. • Example: Studying for a test, is recommended to pass.

  12. Abuse of Commas • Don’t put a comma between two compound verbs or compound verb phrases. • Example: I turned the corner, and ran smack into a patrol car.

  13. Abuse of Commas • Don’t put a comma between two nouns, noun phrases, or noun clauses in a compound subject or compound object. • Example: The music teacher from your high school, and the football coach from mine are married to each other.

  14. Abuse of Commas • Don’t put a comma after the main clause when a dependent (subordinate) clause follows it, which separates the verb from the complement (the completion of the thought). • Example: The cat scratched at the door, while I was eating.

  15. Works Cited • "Using Commas." OWL: Online Writing Lab. 2007. Purdue University Writing Lab. 26 Jun 2007 <http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_comma.html>. • Darling, Charles. "Rules for Comma Usage." Guide to Grammar and Writing. 2004. Capital Community Technical College Foundation. 28 Jun 2007 <http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/commas.htm>.

More Related