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Basic Rules of Punctuation

This document provides guidelines for proper punctuation usage: 1) It outlines the basic rules for using periods, question marks, exclamation points, commas, semicolons, colons, apostrophes, and quotation marks. 2) Examples are given for how to use each punctuation mark correctly in different contexts like ending statements, asking questions, emphasis, separating items in lists, introducing quotations, and indicating possession. 3) Proper punctuation is important for clarity and readability when writing.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
198 views3 pages

Basic Rules of Punctuation

This document provides guidelines for proper punctuation usage: 1) It outlines the basic rules for using periods, question marks, exclamation points, commas, semicolons, colons, apostrophes, and quotation marks. 2) Examples are given for how to use each punctuation mark correctly in different contexts like ending statements, asking questions, emphasis, separating items in lists, introducing quotations, and indicating possession. 3) Proper punctuation is important for clarity and readability when writing.

Uploaded by

marta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Center for Academic Support

Basic Rules of Punctuation

The Period
Use a period to end a statement, mild command, or indirect question
and after most abbreviations.
Example: He arrived on time. (statement)
Sit up straight. (mild command)
Students sometimes wonder whether their teachers
read the papers they write. (indirect question)
Mr. Mrs. lb. a.m. p.m. etc. (abbreviations)

The Question Mark


Use a question mark after a direct question.
Example: Who is going on the trip?

The Exclamation Point


Use an exclamation point after an emphatic statement, command, or
interjection.
Example: We must not lose this election! (emphatic statement)
Stop that right now! (command)
Hey! Ouch! (interjections)

The Comma
Use the comma to separate items in a series.
Example: We bought eggs, cheese, and milk at the store.

Use a comma before a coordinating conjunction (but, or, yet, for, and,
nor, so) joining two independent clauses.
Example: I didn’t have a good time on my vacation, so I
intend to go to a different place next year.

Use a comma after every item in an address or date (if there is more
than one item).
Example: My address is 511 Sand Lane, St. Joseph, Missouri.
I’m going to a conference on Monday, May 11, 1997.

Use a comma to set off most introductory elements.


Example: Fortunately, he said he would go.
Susan, are you going to the store?
Yes, I am going after dinner.
When I arrived, they were eating dinner.
Center for Academic Support

Use a comma to set off nonrestrictive elements.


Example: For camp the children needed clothes that were
washable. (restrictive)
For camp the children needed sturdy shoes, which
were expensive. (nonrestrictive)

Use a comma to separate coordinate adjectives (if they can be


connected with "and").
Example: Robert is a warm, gentle, affectionate father.

Use a comma to set off transitional and parenthetical expressions,


absolute phrases, and contrasted elements.
Example: Mike did not understand the assignment; therefore,
he didn’t complete it. (transitional)
Evolution, as far as we know, does not work this
way. (parenthetical)
His tennis game at last perfected, Chris won the
cup. (absolute)
Celia, unlike Robert, had no loathing for dance
contests. (contrasted)

Use a comma before the text of a quotation.


Example: The teacher said, “Return to your seats.”

Use a comma after the salutation of a friendly letter.


Example: Dear Mom,

The Semicolon
Use a semicolon to separate independent clauses in a sentence and to
separate items in a series when commas are used as well.
Example: Injustice is relatively easy to bear; what stings is
justice (Mencken).
The only sensible ends of literature are first, the
pleasurable toil of writing; second, the gratification
of one’s family and friends; and lastly, the solid
cash (Hawthorne).

The Colon
Use a colon to call attention to the words that follow it.
Example: The routine includes the following: twenty knee
bends, fifty leg lifts, and five minutes of running in
place. (list)
My roommate is guilty of two of the seven deadly
sins: gluttony and sloth. (appositive)
Center for Academic Support

Consider the words of John F. Kennedy: “Ask not


what your country can do for you; ask what you can
do for your country.” (quotation)

The Apostrophe
Use the apostrophe to indicate possession, to mark contractions, and to
pluralize letters or numbers.
Example: boy’s hat; ladies’ hats; men’s coats (possession)
aren’t, won’t, can’t, didn’t (contractions)
There are four s’s in Mississippi. (plural letters)

The Quotation Mark


Use quotation marks to enclose direct quotes and around titles of short
works.
Example: The poem “Mother to Son” is by Langston Hughes.
“A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little
minds,” wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson.

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