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Monday, April 27, 2015  Sit with a group where you will be successful (not tempted to play around).  You will need your journal and a yellow textbook.

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Presentation on theme: "Monday, April 27, 2015  Sit with a group where you will be successful (not tempted to play around).  You will need your journal and a yellow textbook."— Presentation transcript:

1 Monday, April 27, 2015  Sit with a group where you will be successful (not tempted to play around).  You will need your journal and a yellow textbook.  Turn to page 551 and start reading about punctuation. We are learning about special punctuation like dashes, parentheses, hyphens, colons, ellipses, and brackets.  The definitions for these special punctuation marks are in green boxes through the chapter. You will be copying these definitions into the NOTES sections of your journal.

2 Go to these pages and copy all the information inside the green boxes (NOTES section of your journal):  Semicolons: p. 571, 572  Colons: p. 573  Hyphens: p. 587, 588, 590, 591  Apostrophes: p. 593, 594, 595  Parentheses: p. 598 (write what’s under the blue title “parentheses”)  Brackets: p. 599 (write what’s under the blue title “Brackets”)  Ellipses: p. 601, 601-602  Dashes: p. 601, 603

3 Semicolons: - To join independent clauses that don’t have FANBOYS - To join independent clauses that have conjunctive adverbs or transitions. - To separate items in a list that already have commas. Colons: - after an independent clause to introduce a list - to introduce a long or formal quotation - don’t use after a verb or preposition Hyphens: - when you write two-word numbers from 21 to 99 - when using a fraction as an adjective but not when you use a fraction as a noun - after prefix that’s followed by a proper noun/adj. - in words w/the prefix all-, ex- and self- and the suffix -elect - to connect 2 or more words used as one compound word (secretary-treasurer, editor-in-chief) - to connect a compound modifier before a noun, but not one that ends in –ly (well-worn shoes, up-to-date design)

4 Apostrophes: - with an –s to show possession (my dog’s toy) - to show the possessive case of plural nouns (bears’ den) - add an apostrophe + -s to the last word of a compound noun (my sister-in-law’s car, Girl Scouts’ cookie sale) - with indefinite pronouns (anyone’s guess) - to show omitted letters in a contraction (won’t, couldn’t) - to create plural forms of a letter or number (mind your p’s and q’s) Parentheses: - to set off explanations or info that’s related to the sentence - information within parentheses should not begin with a capital letter or end with a period. - If a sentence in parentheses stands on its own, it should have a capital letter and end mark. (This is a complete thought.) Brackets: - to enclose an explanation within a quote that was not part of the original quote. - to enclose an explanation within parentheses

5 Ellipses: - to show where words have been omitted from a quoted passage - to mark a pause in dialogue or speech - You don’t have to use them at the beginning of quoted material, even if you have omitted any information that came before the words you are quoting. - in the middle of a sentence to show an omission, pause, interruption, or incomplete statement - at the end of a sentence to show an omission, pause, or incomplete statement Dashes: - to show a strong, sudden break in thought or speech - in place of in other words, namely, or that is before an explanation

6 Tuesday, April 28 Writing Coach Workbooks Tear out pages 123, 124, 125, 135, 136, 137, 139, 140, 143, 144, 145, 146 Practice A and B, ODD numbers only Practice C is extra credit (you may pick up to FIVE to do on notebook paper) Pages are due Thursday, April 30


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