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Capitalization and punctuation
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Page 1: Capitalization and punctuation

Capitalization and punctuation

Page 2: Capitalization and punctuation

Punctuations

• The use of periods, commas and other marks to help make the meaning of written works clear.

• Punctuations does for writing what pauses and changes of voice do for speech.

Page 3: Capitalization and punctuation

• I can’t find the pickles.• Grandpa John’s mule is in the

pasture.• She didn’t come to dinner.• They’ll be here shortly.

Page 4: Capitalization and punctuation

The apostrophe

(‘)A punctuation mark used to

show possession or omissions in spelling.

Page 5: Capitalization and punctuation

• Donna had four dishes with chile: salsa, green stew, red chile posole and green chile and corn.

• The child was remarkably imaginative: She created an entire city filled with fairies, princes and princesses by using story books, figurines and coffee tables.

Page 6: Capitalization and punctuation

The colon

( : )A punctuation mark most

commonly used before a series of items, explanations or long quotations.

Page 7: Capitalization and punctuation

• Juanita, Tran, billy are the best soccer players in the school.

• Lazily, the river sings us a lullaby.• During the morning, the squirrels ate

all the bird seed.• Since we are friends, I want you to

come to my birthday party.

Page 8: Capitalization and punctuation

The Comma

(,)A punctuation mark used to

separ ate structures in a sentence.

Page 9: Capitalization and punctuation

• Hey!• Ouch! That hurt.• Wow! That was an exciting

movie.• Come in!• She just won the race!

Page 10: Capitalization and punctuation

The exclamation Point

(!)A punctuation mark used to

show strong emotions.

Page 11: Capitalization and punctuation

• The cat drank my milk.• Emily was pretty but wicked.• Please put the groceries away.• Hand me the pliers.• Dr. Gregory will be five minutes late.

Page 12: Capitalization and punctuation

The period

(.)A punctuation mark used to

show the end of a sentence or shortened word.

Page 13: Capitalization and punctuation

• What?• Pardon?• This is good, isn’t it?• How far is it to the grocery store?

Page 14: Capitalization and punctuation

The question mark

(?)A punctuation mark put at the

end of a word, phrase, or a sentence that asks a question.

Page 15: Capitalization and punctuation

• “Quick!” I said, “We’ve got to get someplace safe.”

• “The Titan’s Curse” is my favorite book in The Percy Jackson Series.

Page 16: Capitalization and punctuation

Quotations Marks

(“”)The punctuation marks mainly

used to show the beginnings and end of quoted speech or written works.

Page 17: Capitalization and punctuation

• In the winter, we usually go skiing; when summer comes, we head for the beach.

• The class voted a road through the Petroglyph National Monument; nevertheless, the developer continues to try and change the vote.

Page 18: Capitalization and punctuation

The semicolon

(;)A punctuation mark used in

specific instances as an alternative for a comma or period.

Page 19: Capitalization and punctuation

• Each student needs to bring his/her own lunch.

• We could have peas and/or carrots with the roast.

Page 20: Capitalization and punctuation

The slash/virgule

(/)A punctuation mark used to

show a choice.

Page 21: Capitalization and punctuation

• He said, “The wind blew the tree down.”

• Singapore is an exciting city.• My favorite fictional character is

Ahren Schreave.• The Catastrophic History of You and

Me is a book about the afterlife.• Now I am ready to go.

Page 22: Capitalization and punctuation

capitalization• Capital letters: the large letters

of the alphabet.• Used in the first word in the

sentence even those words inside the quotation marks.

• The pronoun I.• Use capital letters to begin

words in a tile; always capitalize the first and last word.

• Proper noun.