english for careers chapter 11 mastering the fine points of punctuation

32
English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

Upload: opal-fox

Post on 28-Dec-2015

230 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers

Chapter 11Mastering the Fine

Points of Punctuation

Page 2: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.2

Your goals for Chapter 11

Properly punctuate sentences using:

quotation marks italics and underlining the hyphen italics the apostrophe

Page 3: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.3

Use QUOTATION MARKS when quoting someone’s exact words:

Place the marks at the beginning and end of the quotation:

Mark Twain said, “Nothing is ours but our language, our phrasing. If a man takes that from me (knowingly, purposely) he is a thief.”

Page 4: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.4

Do not use quotation marks when paraphrasing:

A paraphrase summarizes the words of someone, but is not a direct quotation.

Mark Twain said using someone’s phrasing without acknowledgement is being a thief.

Page 5: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.5

Place QUOTATION MARKS outside of a period or comma, but inside a colon or semicolon.

“To find yourself, think for yourself,” Socrates said.

Three philosophers are included in “Great Ancient Sages” : Socrates, Plato, and Confucius.

Page 6: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.6

With a question or exclamation mark, where you place quotation marks varies.

Mahatma Ghandi said, “ Could there be a greater proof of our cowardice than fighting amongst ourselves?” (question mark applies only to quote)

Did you know Ghandi said, “ Could there be a greater proof of our cowardice than fighting amongst ourselves”? (question mark applies to entire sentence, not just quote)

Page 7: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.7

Use quotation marks for titles of subdivisions of published works (articles, chapters).

The article, “Eat Less, Live Longer” appeared in yesterday’s newspaper.

Please read “Chapter 12: The Technology Boom” for tomorrow’s class.

Page 8: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.8

Also use quotation marks for names of short works, (poems, songs, and lectures).

My favorite Beatle’s song is “Yesterday.”

When you feel down, read Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s poem, “Cheerfulness Taught by Reason.”

Page 9: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.9

Use italics or underline:

To indicate full-length published works—books, magazines, newspapers, films, plays, and shows.

We read The Catcher in the Rye in high school English class.

In handwriting, use an underline.

Page 10: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.10

Use italics or underline:

To emphasize a word or expression or to show that a word is used where it might seem out of place.

Marie wrote massage instead of message.

Use an underline in handwriting.

Page 11: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.11

The hyphen (-) is used to form compound words:

Compound numbers from twenty-one to ninety-nine are spelled with a hyphen.

Self words are hyphenated except for selfsame.

self-conscious self-respect Hyphenate ex when it means former

ex-president ex-husband

Page 12: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.12

Some compound adjectives require a hyphen: If it is a permanent compound, it will be shown in the dictionary.

These statistics are up-to-date.

Page 13: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.13

If an adjective is more than one word (compound), it has a hyphen if shown in the dictionary OR if it precedes the noun being modified.

hard-working, up-to-date, government-owned, tax-exempt

Page 14: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.14

Use a hyphen when the adjective precedes the noun being modified.

The actor has a five-year contract with the network.

He is a short-tempered person.

Page 15: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.15

When the compound adjective follows the noun, the part of speech often changes; it is no longer a compound adjective.

The contract was for five years.

He has a short temper.

Page 16: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.16

Sometimes a hyphen is needed to avoid confusion:

If a prefix ending in e (such as re, de, or pre) might be confusing use a hyphenRecover (to get better)Re-cover (to cover again)

Page 17: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.17

Most pre, re, and de words do not require hyphens, except sometimes if the main word begins with e:

preheat replay re-elect deselect

Page 18: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.18

If a proper noun follows a prefix, use a hyphen: anti-American ex-President of the United States

pre-Columbian Age

Page 19: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.19

When non, over, under, semi, or sub is a prefix, write the word without a space or hyphen.

nonfat overestimated underachiever semiconductor subcontractor

Page 20: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.20

If the first word of the compound expression ends with ly, the hyphen is usually not required.

fashionably dressed man reasonably priced furniture officially sanctioned rules

Page 21: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.21

If the ly word is an adjective, do use the hyphen.

friendly-looking girl outlandishly-concocted story freshly-squeezed orange juice

Page 22: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.22

No hyphen is required when the word is a well-established compound noun functioning as an adjective:

A high school student found the social security check.

The firm’s junior partner takes his children to the child care center.

Page 23: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.23

Use a hyphen to divide words at the end of a line.

Divide words between syllables.cat.a.log

But avoid distracting the reader with amusing or confusing divisions:

Please send me your cat-alog.

Finally, he abandoned his pet-ulant attitude.

Page 24: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.24

The APOSTROPHE makes a noun possessive. First decide whether it should be singular or plural.

Singular: place the apostrophe before the s

George’s dog is a great pet. Plural: place the apostrophe after the s:The Smiths’ dog is a great pet.

Page 25: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.25

Possessive plural nouns ending with s add an apostrophe only. Two days’ work is required. Nurses’ uniforms are often white.

The students’ books are new. Ten minutes’ notice is enough.

Page 26: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.26

Possessive plural nouns not ending with s add ‘s. Men’s clothing is expensive. The alumni’s party is Tuesday. The children’s toys are new.

Page 27: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.27

Also use apostrophes to form CONTRACTIONS.

Place the apostrophe where letters were removed.You’re doing well. (omitted a)I’ve caught a cold. (omitted ha)That’s the idea. (omitted i)We’re leaving on Tuesday. (omitted a)

Page 28: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.28

Indefinite pronouns may be possessives or contractions.

Possessive It is anyone’s guess.

No one’s back hurts.

It is everybody’s job.

Contraction No one’s back here. Everybody’s going. Something’s wrong.

Page 29: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.29

Do Not use apostrophes with:

The plural of numbersThe temperature is in the 90s.There are several 8s in my address.

The plural of capital letter abbreviationsThe hospital hired two MDs today.Do you know where the YMCAs are?

Page 30: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.30

DO use apostrophes…

For various symbols in statistical reports and formsfeet - 4’ minutes - 30’

When omitting the century for years of graduation and decadesThe Class of ’95 had a reunion in 2000.I’ve always enjoyed music of the ’60s.

Page 31: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.31

DO use apostrophes… With the plural of a lower case letter:

There are four i’s in Mississippi. With possessive abbreviations

The PTA’s status is strong. With plurals of lower case abbreviations if it improves clarity

The secretary received two rsvp’s this morning.

Page 32: English for Careers Chapter 11 Mastering the Fine Points of Punctuation

English for Careers: Business, Professional, and Technical, 10th ed. Smith and Moore

© 2010 Pearson Higher Education,Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. • All Rights

Reserved.32

Checkpoint

You are now familiar with the fine points of using quotation marks, italics and underlining, the hyphen, and the apostrophe.