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Punctuation
Period
-
Use a period after
a declarative sentence, a mildly imperative sentence, or an indirect
question.
Change the rules. He asked if the rules had been changed.
-
Use a period after
most abbreviations.
Mr. Mrs. Ph.D. etc. B.C.E. NATO
CBS
Ellipsis
Exclamation
Point
Semicolon
-
You may use a
semicolon to link two independent clauses if they are closely related.
He walked out of the room; he was thoroughly disgusted.
-
A semicolon should
be used with a relating word (conjunctive adverb) when the relating word
links two independent clauses.
You should stop complaining; instead, you should work harder.
-
Use semicolons to
separate the items in a series when the items contain commas.
He invited Charles, a local politician; Fred, a building contractor; and
Alex, a small businessman, to the committee meeting.
Colon
Dashes
and Parenthesis
-
Use dashes and
parentheses very sparingly in writing. Usually commas are enough to set off
parenthetical expressions.
-
Use dashes to set
off expressions that very violently interrupt the flow of the
sentence--usually sentences within sentences.
She was the woman--I wish I'd never met her--who broke my nose.
-
Use parentheses to
enclose references to figures, page numbers, etc.
You should read all the material on fertilizers (pp. 274-288).
Quotation
Marks
-
Use quotation marks
for titles of less than book length.
He was reading "Stamp Out the Smut Kings."
-
Use quotation marks
to enclose direct quotations.
"Well," he groaned, "I suppose we should bury him."
-
In using marks of
punctuation with quotation marks, follow the printers' rules by placing:
-
the period and
the comma always within the quotation marks,
-
the colon and
semicolon always outside the quotation marks, and
-
the dash, the
question mark, and the exclamation point within the quotation marks when
they apply to the quoted matter and outside when they apply to the whole
sentence.
"I will
go," he insisted. He asked, "When did you get here?" Did she
say, "I will be there"?
Italics
Capitalization
-
Capitalize official
names
Kennedy, England, America, Major Dandy, country, man, my high school,
Texan, American, May, Tuesday, spring, winter, the South, go west young man,
the Middle East, just east of here
Teacher
Territory is designed to assist the high school Language Arts teacher in ideas
and resources for teaching students using a variety of methods. From traditional
methods to integrating technology into the classroom, Teacher Territory can
help. This site currently contains lesson plans, WebQuests, thematic units,
graphic organizers, and more. More things will be added as developed.

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