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MLA Format & Grammar.

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Presentation on theme: "MLA Format & Grammar."— Presentation transcript:

1 MLA Format & Grammar

2 MLA Format Front page left - Name, instructor’s name, class title, date Heading, top read corner - Last name, page numbers Creative Title Ex: Is the Digital Age Really That Bad? 12 pt font, “normal” font style Paragraph indentations Double spaced

3 Commas After dependent clauses Not in or between independent clauses
Lists, lists, and lists

4 Quotation Marks Thompson says, “Bla bla bla bla” (21).
Put commas and periods inside quotes: “audience effect,” and “audience effect.” Put colons and semicolons outside quotes: “audience effect”; “audience effect”: Block quotes - more than 4 lines

5 Semicolons and Colons Use a semicolon with two independent clauses that are related; they might say connected things and by using a semicolon you show their connection. Use a colon when a dependent clause directly relates to the sentence: when it is an elaboration on it. You can also use an em dash—that’s good, too.

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7 Subject-Verb Agreement: Singular-singular, plural-plural

8 Passive Voice If you can end the sentence with “by zombies,” then you are speaking in passive voice. Put your subject in control… not zombies. easy-way-to-help-you-find-passive-voice/

9 References Book titles and Magazines
“Chapters,” “poems,” other small things

10 Assumptions/Generalizations/Big words
To avoid saying something untrue for all people/audiences, so as not to limit/alienate your audience to only people who agree with these views, avoid “big words”: always, proves, perfect, never, fact, only, would/will, is, every, everyone/everybody


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