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Pesky Punctuation 3 Quotation Marks Ellipsis Dash Hyphen Brackets Parentheses
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Pesky Punctuation 3

Jan 10, 2016

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Pesky Punctuation 3. Quotation Marks Ellipsis Dash Hyphen Brackets Parentheses. Dash Hyphen Phrasal Adjective Parentheses. Quotation Marks Brackets Ellipsis. Pesky Punctuation 3. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Pesky Punctuation 3

Pesky Punctuation 3

Quotation Marks Ellipsis

Dash Hyphen

BracketsParentheses

Page 2: Pesky Punctuation 3

Pesky Punctuation 3 Dash Hyphen Phrasal

Adjective Parentheses

Quotation Marks Brackets Ellipsis

Page 3: Pesky Punctuation 3

The dash The dash is punctuation. It is

usually used to set off a nonessential element:Our new goal—retention—changes

the way we approach our mission.Our new goal (retention) changes the

way we approach our mission.Our new goal, retention, changes the

way we approach our mission.

Page 4: Pesky Punctuation 3

The dash The dash is more

dramatic—it draws the reader’s eye to the element.

The parenthetical is more low-key (it acts more as a whispered aside).

Page 5: Pesky Punctuation 3

The dash There are three styles of dashes:

the broken dash (left overfrom typewriter days)

the em dash (1/m) the en dash (1/n)

Use one style of dash consistently throughout the document.

--

—–

Page 6: Pesky Punctuation 3

The dash You may put a space before and after

the dash or not. The new version — 4.1 — is flawed. The new version—4.1—is flawed.

Just be consistent throughout the document.

Page 7: Pesky Punctuation 3

The hyphen The hyphen is a spelling tool.

Never use it as punctuation.president-electlow-cost health insurancemother-in-lawex-husbandself-interesttwo-year-old childninety-three

Page 8: Pesky Punctuation 3

The hyphen Traditionally, the hyphen is also

used to show ranges of numbers.The cost should be $25-$40.

But this trend is changing, and you will often see the en dash used to show ranges.The cost should be $25–$40.

Either is correct, as long as you use the same style consistently throughout your document.

Page 9: Pesky Punctuation 3

Phrasal adjectives A phrasal adjective is a group of

words that act as a single word to modify the noun that follows them.

Hyphens connect the modifying words. The bell sounds at five-minute

intervals.phrasal adjective

noun

Page 10: Pesky Punctuation 3

Phrasal adjectives The purpose of a

phrasal adjective is to guide the reader smoothly through the sentence.

Page 11: Pesky Punctuation 3

Phrasal adjectives If the modifying words follow the noun,

no hyphens are used. The bell sounds at five-minute intervals. The bell sounds at intervals of five minutes.

If one of the words is an adverb ending in -ly, the hyphen is omitted. The rapidly degenerating meeting was soon

ended. Her rapid-fire responses thrilled us.

Page 12: Pesky Punctuation 3

Phrasal adjectives Sometimes the distinction

is a fine one: Please provide a two-day notice

before painting the conference room. “A two-day notice” uses a phrasal

adjective. Please provide two days’ notice

before painting. “Two days’ notice” is the possessive form

of the phrase “a notice of two days.”

Page 13: Pesky Punctuation 3

Parentheses Like the dash, the parenthetical

may be used for to set off a nonessential element in a sentence. Our new goal (retention)

changes the way we approach our mission.

Page 14: Pesky Punctuation 3

Parentheses The parenthetical is also used for

internal citations, as in the MLA example below.

One author explained, “We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in retrospection” (Nin 16).

Page 15: Pesky Punctuation 3

The quotation mark In American English, periods and

commas always go inside the quotation mark.

Our new supervisor suggests we rename the project “Operation FastBuild.”

If we call it “FastBuild,” we may not live up to the name!

Page 16: Pesky Punctuation 3

The quotation mark In American English, colons and

semicolons always go outside the quotation mark.

The team is uncertain of the purpose behind the name “FastBuild”; is it an incentive to push production?

This is what I think of “FastBuild”: it will not cause us to produce any faster.

Page 17: Pesky Punctuation 3

The quotation mark In American English, question

marks and exclamation points may go inside or outside the quotation mark depending on the part of the sentence to which they logically attach.

Shall we agree to call the project “FastBuild”?

The new supervisor asked Jon, “Do you like our new project name?”

Page 18: Pesky Punctuation 3

The quotation mark In American English, quoted

language within quoted language uses single quotation marks.

I heard the new supervisor ask Rita, “Don’t you think ‘FastBuild’ should be our new project name?”

Page 19: Pesky Punctuation 3

Brackets Brackets show

that you have changed something in the quoted language you integrate into your sentence.

Original: “A writer doesn’t solve problems. He allows them to emerge.”

Quoted: As one writer put it, writers don’t “solve problems. [They] allow[] them to emerge” (Dürrenmatt 452).

Page 20: Pesky Punctuation 3

The ellipsis The ellipsis is

used when you are quoting; it shows that you have left something out.

Original: “All that we are is the result of what we have thought. The mind is everything. What we think, we become.”

Quoted: Buddha said, “All that we are is the result of what we have thought. … What we think, we become.”

Page 21: Pesky Punctuation 3

Pesky Punctuation 3 Dash Hyphen Phrasal

Adjective Parentheses

Quotation Marks Brackets Ellipsis