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Comma Rules Lesson One. Commas Are Needed When... 1. Three or more items are in a list. Ex. Please pick up eggs, bacon, and bread. 2. Two “equal adjectives”

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Presentation on theme: "Comma Rules Lesson One. Commas Are Needed When... 1. Three or more items are in a list. Ex. Please pick up eggs, bacon, and bread. 2. Two “equal adjectives”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Comma Rules Lesson One

2 Commas Are Needed When... 1. Three or more items are in a list. Ex. Please pick up eggs, bacon, and bread. 2. Two “equal adjectives” are in a row to describe a noun (adjectives are equal if they don’t need to appear in any particular order). Ex. Please pick up your wet, stinky socks. Vs. Please pick that big red apple.

3 Commas Are Needed When... 3. A “direct address” -- when a speaker addresses someone by name. Ex. Allen, please bring me that wrench. 4. A full date is written out -- comma is placed between day and year (and after the year if sentence continues). Ex. On April 23, 1902, something happened.

4 Commas Are Needed When... 5. Address or location -- commas is placed after the street, after the city, and after the state (if the sentence continues). Ex. My address used to be 35 Water Street, Mattapoisett, Massachusetts.

5 Practice -- Name Rule, Add Commas 1. I went to the store to buy a bag of chips a can of soda and a box of Twinkies. 2. My neighbor has a hideous stinky pet dog. 3. I don’t know what to tell you John. 4. My brother was born on July 4 1997 so we always light fireworks for his birthday party. 5. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is located at 1100 Rock and Roll Boulevard Cleveland Ohio.

6 Practice -- “Equal Adjectives?” Yes or No? 1. I try to stay away from that danger-filled crime-ridden part of town. 2. We built a clubhouse in the old elm tree behind our house. 3. Grandpa is a friendly generous man. 4. Your friend is an obnoxious inconsiderate person.

7 Practice -- Create example sentences. 1. Separate three or more items in a list with commas. 2. Separate two equal adjectives with a comma. 3. With dates, use a comma between the day and the year and after the year if the sentence continues. 4. With addresses or locations, use a comma after the street name, after the city, and after the state if the sentence continues. 5. A comma is used in a “direct address” when the speaker addresses someone by name.

8 Practice -- Find Exemplar Sentences From your reading today, find a sentence that uses a comma according to one of the five rules we learned today. 1. Quote and cite the sentence. 2. Identify the rule being used. 3. Explain why the comma is needed -- how does it clarify the meaning of the sentence?


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