Semicolons, Colons , Hyphens & Dashes

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Semicolons, Colons, Hyphens & Dashes By Ralea M. Haun

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Semicolons, Colons , Hyphens & Dashes. By Ralea M. Haun. Pre-Teaching Activity. What is a colon? What is a semicolon? What is a hyphen? What is a dash?. Answers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Semicolons, Colons , Hyphens & Dashes

Page 1: Semicolons,  Colons ,  Hyphens  &  Dashes

Semicolons, Colons, Hyphens & DashesBy Ralea M. Haun

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Pre-Teaching Activity• What is a colon?• What is a semicolon?• What is a hyphen?• What is a dash?

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Answers• A colon is used to mark a major division in a

sentence, to indicate that what follows is an elaboration, summation, implication; or to separate groups of numbers referring to different things

• A semicolon is used to indicate a major division in a sentence where a more distinct separation is felt between clauses.

• A hyphen is a short, single-character line which connects word parts.

• A dash is a longer line—double the length of a hyphen—which indicates a break or interruption in the thought

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Semicolons• A semicolon is the punctuation mark (;) used to

indicate a major division in a sentence where a more distinct separation is felt between clauses.

• A semicolon is more than a comma, but less than a period, so it combines the two into a single punctuation mark.

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How To Use a Semicolon• There are two uses for a semicolon• #1 Use a semicolon in place of a comma plus conjunction

when combining clauses in a sentence• Ex: Many Americans love baseball; in fact, it’s

sometimes called the Great American Pastime.• Sometimes, a writer might use a conjunctive adverb to

explain the relationship between two independent clauses• Ex: Coach wants to make sure we win the

championship next week; therefore, we have extra practices this week.

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How To Use a Semicolon• #2 Use a semicolon to separate items in a series

if one or more of the series items already contains a comma • Ex: At the pet store last night, I bought an aquarium, a

filter, and three fish. • In the sentence above, each series item is easily

identified. However, if one or more items in the series contains a comma already, use a semicolon to separate the series items.

• I also looked at a beagle; a golden retriever; and a Australian cattle dog and Siberian husky mix.• Without the semicolons in the sentence above, readers

might have trouble figuring out how many dogs he actually saw.

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Two Cautions For Semicolons 1. Make sure you do not use both a semicolon and a conjunction in the same sentence.

2. Avoid overusing semicolons

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Colons• A colon is used to mark a major division in a

sentence, to indicate that what follows is an elaboration, summation, implication; or to separate groups of numbers referring to different things

• A colon says that you have introduced what will follow. Think of is as a pair of eyes pointing to what is coming next.

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How To Use a Colon• The main use: Use a colon to follow an

introduction.• Sometimes you might want to introduce

something before you give the details. A colon separates the introduction from what is being introduced.• Ex: Football requires players to develop multiple skills:

running, passing, tackling, and blocking.• So far, colons seem easy. Colons are misused a lot

because they have to follow a few rules.

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Rules of Colons• A colon may be placed only after a complete independent

clause. • Incorrect: Meanwhile: we wasted two hours wandering around the

airport.• The introductory word “Meanwhile” should be followed by a comma

rather than a colon• Correct: Meanwhile, we wasted two hours wandering around the airport.

• Don’t use a colon with an introductory phrase. Using introductory phrases accomplishes the same thing as a colon.• Incorrect: By the age of twelve, most people catch the “childhood

diseases,” for example: measles, mumps and the chicken pox.• The phrase “for example” and the colon mean the same thing. Use

one or the other not both. • Correct: By the age of twelve, most people catch the “childhood

diseases”: measles, mumps, and the chicken pox.

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Rules of Colons (cont.)• Don’t use a colon between a preposition and its

object. • Incorrect: The mall includes: Forever 21, Dillards, and

Belk.• Correct: The mall includes Forever 21, Dillards, and Belk.

• Never use more than one colon in a sentence! • Incorrect: The President’s new policy on stem cell

research is controversial: it has been praised and criticized by members of both parties: Republican and Democrat.• Correct: The President’s new policy on stem cell research

is controversial: it has been praised and criticized by both Republicans and Democrats.

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Other Uses of Colons• Use a colon to separate the chapter and the verse

in biblical references• Use a colon to separate the hour and minutes in a

time reference• Use a colon to separate a title and a subtitle

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Hyphens• What does a Hyphen do?• Hyphens function to avoid confusion and misreading by

joining compound words including nouns and other modifiers.

• How many uses of a hyphen are there?• There are seven

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The Seven Uses of a Hyphen1. Use hyphens with compound numbers between twenty-one and ninety-nine• Also use hyphens to separate numerators and denominators

in fractions2. Use hyphens with some compound nouns

• Ex: Mother-in-law• Do not use hyphens with other compound nouns• Ex: toothpaste

3. Use hyphens to join coequal nouns• Ex: writer-illustrator

• Do not use hyphens between nouns in which the first noun modifies or describes the second• Ex: football player

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The Seven Uses of a Hyphen (cont.)4. Use hyphens to join compound modifiers that precede nouns

• Ex: middle-class family5. Use hyphens to separate words in phrases functioning as modifiers that precede nouns

• Ex: all-you-can-eat buffet6. Use hyphens with certain prefixes and suffixes• all-, anti-, -elect, ex-, mid-, neo-, post-, and self-• Ex: all-purpose

• Do not use hyphens with most other prefixes• Ex: unhappy

7. Use hyphens to avoid confusion and misreading• Ex: re-sign (as in to sign again, not to resign or quit)

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Dashes• A dash is used to emphasize what follows• Use dashes sparingly: not more than a pair per sentence

in informal writing and (if possible) not more than per paragraph in formal writing

• Use a dash for a change of topic within a sentence• Ex: This very important—are you listening to me?

• Use a dash if the information that follows is surprising• Ex: We went shopping in London—and saw Big Ben

• Use a dash to show hesitation• Ex: I want to go get something to eat—Chinese?

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Dashes (cont.)• Use a dash to indicate a summarizing clause• Ex: Jane, Jim, and Susan-they all were taken back.

• Use a dash to indicate an emphasized addition• Use a dash to enclose emphasized additional

information which interrupts the normal progression of the sentence• Ex: He wanted us-Caron, Susan, and I-to meet his family.

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Dash vs. Hyphen• A hyphen is a short, single-character line which

connects word parts.• A dash is a longer line—double the length of a

hyphen—which indicates a break or interruption in the thought