semicolons and colons. can join two sentences together. ex: jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. he...

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Semicolons and Colons

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Page 1: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

Semicolons and Colons

Page 2: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

Can join two sentences together.Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left

his own bag in the car.Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs; he left his own bag in the car.

If a sentence has too many commas, use a semicolon to join them instead.Ex: I wrote to Ann, Ramona, and Mai, and

Jean wrote to Charles, Latoya, and Sue.I wrote to Ann, Ramona, and Mai; Jean wrote to Charles, Latoya, and Sue.

Page 3: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

When you are listing things, use semicolons to join items that already contain commas.

Ex: They visited Phoenix, Arizona; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and San Antonio, Texas.

Ex: Mr. Schultz, my science teacher; Ms. O’Hara, my English teacher; Mrs. Gomez, my math teacher; and Mr. Jones, my social studies teacher, attended the seventh-grade picnic.

Page 4: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

We went home mom made us lunch.

I have lived in Long Beach, CA Durham, NC and San Antonio, TX.

Your grades have improved you will graduate.

I called Liz, Mike, and Jim and she called everyone else.

Page 5: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

And, but, or, for, nor, yet, so

Join two sentences together using comma Ex: I went running. Steve went hiking.

Can’t join these sentences together with only a comma; you need a conjunction too!

Ex: I went running, and Steve went hiking.

Also join to items together. Ex: I like basketball and football. Ex: She sings and dances.

Page 6: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

She left for work. She was still late.

Luke walked for three hours. He was tired.

I wanted ice cream. I went to Ben and Jerry’s.

My homework wasn’t done. I got a zero.

I hoped to go to Hawaii. It was my dream.

Page 7: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

Use a colon before a list of items. Ex: You will need these items for the project:

a ruler, colored pencils, and tracing paper. Ex: Jack’s pocket contained the following

items: a key, a note, and a quarter. Note: You must have an expression like

“the following” in order to use a colon. Ex: Your heading should contain the

following: your name, the date, and the title. Your heading should contain your name, the

date, and the title.

Page 8: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

Use a colon between the hour and the minute.8:30AM

Use a colon after the greeting in a business letter.Dear Sir:

When listing Bible verses and titles.Ex: John 3:1-12Ex: “My Biography: Life as a HSA Student”

Page 9: Semicolons and Colons.  Can join two sentences together.  Ex: Jimmy took my suitcase upstairs. He left his own bag in the car. Jimmy took my suitcase

We have studied the following subjects math, science, and history.

I went to bed at 1100 pm.

I memorized Matthew 5 6-7.

The name of the story is “Jackie A Girl from the South.”