Punctuating Quotations

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PUNCTUATING QUOTATIONS MINI-LESSON #83 Created April 2012.
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Quotation Marks with Other Marks (#93) FROM THE UWF WRITING LAB’S 101 GRAMMAR MINI-LESSONS SERIES Lily said, “This is the slowest service I’ve ever seen.”
Writing Lab Semicolons.
Plurals: Letters, Numbers, Symbols, Time Periods, etc.
Pronoun Case and Comparisons
Writing Lab Commas with Sentence Tags, Conjunctive Adverbs, Parenthetical Elements, and Interrupters.
Writing Lab Slash or Virgule.
Diction: Amount and number, Fewer and Less, Between and Among
Diction: A Lot & All Right
Agreement-Simple Problems
Writing Lab Idioms.
Compass Directions vs. Geographical Areas
Italics/Underlining and Quotation Marks
Transitive and Intransitive Verbs
Commas with Restrictive and Nonrestrictive Elements
Writing Lab Colons.
Vague Pronoun Reference
Commas with Degrees and Titles
Intervening Word Groups
Capitalization-Religion
Writing Lab Diction: Then vs. Than.
Capitalization—Political Groups, Departments, and Organizations
Writing Lab Dangling Modifiers.
Diction- Kind of and Sort of; Could of, Should of, and Would of
Writing Lab You - Irregular Use.
Adjectives and Adverbs – Linking Verbs
Writing Lab Capitalization of Titles – Professional, Military, Literary Works, Newspapers, and Magazines.
Capitalization – Academic Classifications
Subjects Preceded by Each, Every, and Many
Adjective and Adverbs – Common Errors
Possessive Pronouns vs. Contractions
Agreement-Indefinite Pronouns
Capitalization-Races, Nationalities, and Species
Verb Forms: Lie/Lay, Sit/Set, Rise/Raise
Agreement-Singular Subjects
Writing Lab Sentence Fragments.
Verb Forms: -ed endings
Writing Lab Lie and Lay.
Quotation Marks with Other Marks
Objective Case Pronouns
Pronoun Reference - Who, Whose, Which, Where, and That
Commas with Quotations
Agreement- “A/The Number of” And “A/The Percentage of”
Possessives with Plural Nouns
Writing Lab Diction: A and An.
Pronoun Reference – Relative Pronouns
Diction: Affect and Effect
Capitalization—Names
Diction: Their, There, They’re; To, Too, Two; and Your and You’re
Commas with Compound Sentences and Compound Elements
Agreement- Compound Subjects
Writing Lab Ellipses.
Diction - Principal and Principle
Possessives with Gerunds
Comparisons: Comparative and Superlative Degrees
Commas in Dates and Geographic Units
Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement
Diction: Used to and Supposed to
Pronouns and Nominative Case
Brackets and Parentheses
Parallelism with Mixed Series
Commas with Introductory Elements
Pronoun Case with Who and Whom
Comparisons: Illogical, Ambiguous, and Incomplete
Writing Lab Agreement-Gerunds.
Parallelism: Correlative Pairs
Capitalization: Days of the Week, Months, and Holidays
Subjects and Complements
Pronoun Reference – Broad References Using Which and That
Writing Lab Here and There.
Presentation transcript:

Punctuating Quotations Writing Lab Punctuating Quotations

Commas and Periods When a comma comes before a direct quotation, place it outside of the quotation marks. John stood up and said, “Today is the day.” When a comma comes after a direct quotation, it goes inside of the quotation marks. “When I grow up, I want to be an astronaut,” the toddler said proudly. Periods always go inside quotations marks. The dog said “woof.”

Semicolons and Colons Always place semicolons and colons outside of quotation marks. The graffito on a bathroom wall reads “ESP should be outlawed”; underneath this quote is “I knew you’d say that!”

Exclamation Points and Question Marks Exclamation points and question marks can go inside or outside of quotation marks. If a quotation is making an exclamation or asking a question, place the exclamation point or question mark inside of the end quotation. Which philosopher said, “I think; therefore, I am”? The guard yelled, “Halt!”

Quotes within quotes When a quoting a quote within a quote, use double quotes on the outside quote and single quotes on the inside. Dr. Feinstein opened his lecture by saying, “Albert Einstein reminded us that ‘Great spirits always receive violent opposition from mediocre minds.’”

That’s all, folks! This lesson is part of the UWF Writing Lab Grammar Mini-Lesson Series Lessons adapted from Real Good Grammar, Too by Mamie Webb Hixon To find out more, visit the Writing Lab’s website where you can take a self-scoring quiz corresponding to this lesson