1 / 17

Commas and Quotation Marks

Commas and Quotation Marks. English II 21 August 2012. When to use commas…. Separate items in a series After an introductory phrase or word To set off a direct address Interrupters Some appositives At least two items in a date or an address To avoid misreading Coordinate adjectives.

zuriel
Download Presentation

Commas and Quotation Marks

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. Commas and Quotation Marks English II 21 August 2012

  2. When to use commas… • Separate items in a series • After an introductory phrase or word • To set off a direct address • Interrupters • Some appositives • At least two items in a date or an address • To avoid misreading • Coordinate adjectives

  3. To separate items in a series • Example: • Mom, Dad, and Carla packed for their vacation.

  4. After an introductory phrase or word… • Interjections- words that show emotion or exclamation • Example: • Wow, what a beautiful girl! • In the light of the moon, the flowers opened. • DO NOT USE A COMMA IF THE VERB COMES DIRECTLY AFTER THE PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE. • At the edge of the gardenwere many flowers.

  5. To set off a direct address… • Example: • Marquis, do you have a ruler? • Next, class, we will begin our practice assignment. • We changed your oil, Mr. Harris.

  6. To set off interrupters… • Example: • He was, I believe, a talented athlete. • You, on the other hand, are exempt from the assignment.

  7. To set off appositives… • Example: • Vanessa, my favorite cousin, is coming to visit me. • WHEN THE OPPOSITIVE IS NESSECARY, A COMMA IS NOT. • My favorite cousin Vanessa is coming to visit me.

  8. To set off dates and addresses… • Example: • Biloxi, Mississippi, is found on the Gulf of Mexico. • On the Gulf of Mexico is Biloxi, Mississippi. • On December 22, 1981, I was born.

  9. To avoid misreading… • Example: • Those who can, can go home now. • In the summer, time seems to fly more quickly. • DO NOT USE COMMAS TO SEPARATE “had had” • He had had the mumps before he had the measles.

  10. Coordinate Adjectives… • Two or more adjectives that modify the same noun EQUALLY. • Hint, they can be flipped without changing the sentence’s meaning. • Example: • It was a cool, windy night. • She was a sweet, thoughtful girl.

  11. When to use Punctuation Marks… • Direct quotes- when you tell a person’s exact words • Titles of shorter works

  12. Direct Quotes… • When the speaker comes at the beginning of the sentence, put the comma after the noun or pronoun. The end punctuation will go inside the quotation mark if it is a simple statement. • Example: • The boy asked, “Can I have ice cream?” • His mother squalled, “You are spoiled!”

  13. Speaker at the end… • With a simple statement, the period becomes a comma inside the quote. • “I want some ice cream,” Willie stated. • If it is an exclamation point or question mark, no comma is used. • “He is a brat!” the girl exclaimed. • “Do I have to?” he questioned.

  14. Speaker in the middle… • You need commas surrounding the speaker, but YOU DO NOT CAPITALIZE the second half of the quote. • “I like,” she said, “to ride horses.” • “That girl,” the boy cooed, “is very pretty.”

  15. Titles… • Poems, but not epics • Single TV Episodes • Short Stories • Speeches • Song Titles • Articles

  16. Quotes/Short Work Titles Within Quotes… • Use a single quote within a quote. • Megan answered, “The quote is actually ‘Money doesn’t buy happiness.’” • “Have you read,” Dane asked, “ the short story ‘The Lottery’?”

  17. Good luck!

More Related