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Grammar Crammers 1-10 G. Herbst 2011. Dates Always use Arabic figures (1, 2, 3… not I, II, III…) without st, nd, th, or rd. Spell out all months unless.

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Presentation on theme: "Grammar Crammers 1-10 G. Herbst 2011. Dates Always use Arabic figures (1, 2, 3… not I, II, III…) without st, nd, th, or rd. Spell out all months unless."— Presentation transcript:

1 Grammar Crammers 1-10 G. Herbst 2011

2 Dates Always use Arabic figures (1, 2, 3… not I, II, III…) without st, nd, th, or rd. Spell out all months unless used with a date o When used with a date, only abbreviate Jan., Feb., Aug., Sept., Oct., Nov., and Dec. o When months begin sentences they must be spelled out o Examples: 1.The game took place on Oct. 23, 2011. 2.October 23, 2011 was the date of the game. 3.Classes began Sept. 6. 4.Homecoming takes place in October.

3 Numbers One through nine are spelled out 10 and above are written numerically – UNLESS the number begins a sentence, then spell out Sports scores are always written using Arabic figures, with a dash – Example: 3-1 Times and years are also written using Arabic figures – She ran her event in 2:35. – 1976 was a very good year. Write out first through ninth, then use 10 th and so on for ordinal numbers – UNLESS part of the forming name Example: Those patients are house in the 1 st Ward.

4 Names Always use first and last names upon first mention for anyone – If the person has a title, use it on the first mention For the second mention in the same story, only use the person’s last name o Example: Dr. Gary Woods is the superintendant for BHUSD. Woods’s last job was in San Marino.

5 Titles Confine capitalization to formal titles used directly before an individual’s name Basic guidelines: o Lowercase and spell out titles when they are not used with an individual’s name Ex: The president issued a statement. o Lowercase and spell out titles when set off from a name by commas Ex: The vice president, Nelson Rockefeller, declined to run again. o Capitalize formal titles when they are used immediately before one or more names Ex: Principal Carter Paysinger, Student Body President Joe Shmoe o Do not capitalize teacher or student

6 Classes and Sports Teams Do not capitalize unless using a specific title or if class name is already a proper noun o Ex: English, social studies, Algebra II, algebra, chemistry, AP Chemistry, Spanish, US History, biology, AP European History, drama, Advanced Journalism Names of sports teams are never capitalized o Only JV is capitalized If using the gender in the name of the team, the apostrophe goes on the outside of the s o Ex: girls’ varsity basketball, football, track, boys’ JV soccer

7 Where at Do not use at to end a sentence using where o Ex:  Incorrect: That was where he was at.  Correct: That was where he was.  Incorrect: Where is the party at?  Correct: Where is the party?

8 As/like As o Conjunction o Correct word to introduce clauses  Ex: Jim blocks the linebacker as he should. Like o Preposition o Use to compare nouns and pronouns; requires an object.  Ex: Jim blocks like a pro.

9 Double negatives: NO, NO! I didn’t do nothing is a double negative. o didn’t is negative; nothing is negative o Each negative cancels out the other o This is Colloquial English  does not follow the rules of standard grammar

10 Because/Since Because o Used to denote a specific cause-effect relationship  Ex: He went because he was told. Since o Acceptable in a casual sense when the first event in a sequence led logically to the second but was not its direct cause  Ex: They went to the game, since they had been given the tickets.

11 Imply/Infer Imply o Writers or speakers imply in the words they use Infer o A listener or reader infers something from the words they hear or read

12 Semicolon Used to indicate greater separation of thought and information than a comma can convey but less than a period implies. It is generally best to avoid semicolons to link independent clauses and always opt for separate sentences.

13 Semicolons To clarify a series: o use to separate elements of a series when items in the series are long or when individual segments contain material that must also be set off by commas.  Ex: He is survived by a son, John Smith, of Chicago; three daughters, Jane Smith, of Wichita, Kan., Mary Smith, of Denver, and Susan, of Boston; and a sister, Martha, of Omaha, Neb. (Note usage of semicolon before final and)

14 Shattered Glass You are a fact checker at the local newspaper and find that one of the reporters has been making up quotes from sources, in addition to facts. The problem is, he is a really good friend of yours. In six sentences or more, explain what you would do and why.

15 Semicolons To link independent clauses: o Use when a coordinating conjunction such as and, but or for is not present  Ex: The package was due last week; it arrived today.  Attempt to avoid this usage by creating separate sentences. o If coordinating conjunction is present, use semicolon before it only if extensive punctuation is required in one or more of the individual clauses  Ex: They pulled their boats from the water, sandbagged the retaining walls, and boarded up the windows; but even with these precautions, the island was hard-hit by the hurricane.

16 Semicolons Placement with quotes o Place semicolons outside quotation marks


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