Writing
with Style | Elements
of Written Communication | The
Writing Process | |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
SENTENCE PARTS AND TYPES Parts of SpeechParts of speech refer to the way that words are used
in sentences. There are eight
parts of speech: noun, pronoun, adjective, verb, adverb, preposition,
conjunction, and interjection. Noun A noun is the name of a
person, place, thing, or idea. Nouns
may be common or proper. Proper nouns are
capitalized: Common:
brother newspaper
beach
democracy
baseball Proper:
Grand Canyon
Michael Johnson
Sea World
Paris Nouns may also be grouped as concrete,
abstract, or collective: Concrete nouns name a tangible thing,
something that can be touched or seen: guitar
White House
soccer
ice-cream friend Abstract nouns name something that
cannot be touched or seen, such as an idea, doctrine, thought, theory,
concept, condition, or feeling: joy
Christianity
illness love
euphoria
excellence
prejudice Collective nouns name a group or
unit:
faculty
audience school
herd
San Diego Chargers Nouns may also be grouped by their function
in a sentence: subject, object, complement, appositive, or modifier. Pronoun A pronoun is a word used in
place of a noun. The noun or pronoun that the pronoun refers to or
replaces is called its antecedent. (See the section on
Pronoun Agreement for more about antecedents). Personal pronouns
change form to indicate case, gender, number, and person:
Reflexive pronouns refer
back to (or modify) a noun or pronoun. They are formed by adding
the suffix –self.
I didn’t realize that she would bring the package herself.
We decided to show ourselves out. Relative pronouns relate
an adjective clause back to the noun or pronoun it modifies. (See the
section on Essential and Nonessential Clauses for more on using relative
pronouns.) Relative
pronouns are:
who whose
whom which
what that
My new jeans, which are fabulous, cost $75.00. Musicians who practice regularly are most
comfortable in front of an audience. Interrogative pronouns are used to
ask a question: who
whose whom
which what What
do you want?
To whom am I speaking? Whose
notebook is this?
Which entrée did you order?
Demonstrative pronouns point
out, or demonstrate, specific things: this
that
these
those That
is my suitcase.
Those don’t look ripe. Indefinite pronouns refer to unknown
people or things: anyone
someone
either
everybody nobody
many
several
nothing Adjective An adjective is a word that describes
or modifies a noun or pronoun:
Little people peek through big steering
wheels.
The strongest man I ever saw wore silver shoes. An adjective does not always come before the word it
modifies:
The dentist, daring and diligent, worked on his new
patient’s cavities. Remember that the articles a, an, and the
are also adjectives. Verb A verb is a word that expresses an action
or a state of being. An action verb expresses mental or
physical action: speak
compose
drive
participate
catch hope
believe
approve understand
choose A helping verb helps the main verb to
express action or to make a statement. The main verb plus the helping verb
together make a verb phrase.
The helping verb is italicized below:
My dad will work late one or two nights a week
when he should be sleeping in his bed. Verbs
of being include all the forms of the verb be:
Be
am
is
are
was were
being been Verbs
of being also include verb phrases ending in be, being, or been, such
as could be, was being, and, could
have been. A linking verb
connects the subject of the sentence with a word that describes or
explains it. The most common linking very is be
and its forms (above). Other
linking verbs include such verbs as smell,
look, taste, remain, appear, sound, seem, become, and grow:
In his new carriage, the baby felt cool.
He was a driver! He
looked more mature. Verb Tenses Verb tenses
indicate time: past, present,
and future. The six tenses
are formed from the principal parts of the verb: Infinitive
Present Participle
Past
Past Participle
To march
marching
marched
marched Regular verbs
follow rules when forming the six tenses.
Irregular verbs follow no fixed rules; you simply have to memorize
them or consult a dictionary. Regular
verbs are formed as follows: Present
tense expresses action
that is occurring at the present time or action that happens continually,
regularly:
I watch
she talks
The band marches every day. Past tense
expresses action that was completed at a particular time in the past.
I watched
she talked
The band marched yesterday. Future tense
expresses action that will occur in the future:
I shall watch
she will talk
The band will march tomorrow. Present
perfect tense expresses
action that began in the past but continues in the present:
I have watched
she has talked
The band has marched all fall. Past perfect
tense expresses action
that began in the past and was completed in the past:
I had watched
she had talked
The band had marched last week. Future
perfect tense expresses
action that will be completed in the future before some other future
action or event: I have watched
she will have talked
The band will have marched 178 days
by vacation. Adverb
An adverb
modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. An adverb tells how,
when, where, why, how often, to what extent, and how much:
Yesterday a
fire completely destroyed the home of a family on Hill Street.
Rarely does a fire last so long.
The family looked totally grungy after hauling out their
valuables all day. Preposition A preposition
is a word (or group of words) that shows the relationship between its
object (a noun or a pronoun that follows the preposition) and another word
in the sentence. Prepositions may
be simple (at, in, of, to, for, with), compound (without, inside,
alongside), or phrasal (in spite of, on top of, aside from, because of). A preposition
never stands alone in a sentence; it is always used in a prepositional
phrase with the object of a preposition (a noun or pronoun) and the
modifiers of the object:
The pool shark leaned over the
ball with a confident smirk on his face.
Standing near the table, he consciously ignored the hisses of
the crowd. Conjuction A conjunction
connects individual words or groups of words:
A puffer fish is short and fat.
A tiny bird cannot fly, nor can it feed itself. There are three
kinds of conjunctions: Coordinating
conjunctions:
and, but, or, nor, for, so, yet Correlative
conjunctions:
either… or
neither… nor
not only… but also
both… and
whether… or
just… as Subordinating
conjunctions:
after, although, as, as much as, as though, because,
before, if, in order that, provided that, since, than, though, unless,
until, when, where, whereas, while Interjection An interjection
is a word or group of words that expresses strong emotion or surprise.
Punctuation (often a comma or exclamation point) is used to
separate an interjection from the rest of the sentence:
Cool, the boat’s leaking.
Oh, no! I
can’t swim. CLAUSES AND PHRASES Clauses A clause is a
group of words that contains both a subject and a verb.
My uncle looks and walks exactly like Groucho Marx.
subject verbs Some clauses can
stand alone as sentences; others must be grouped with other clauses to
create a complete sentence. An independent
clause can stand alone as a sentence: Because he
looks like Groucho Marx, he won five hundred dollars in a contest.
independent clause A dependent
clause has a subject and a predicate, but it would be an
incomplete sentence by itself. A
dependent clause contains a subordinating conjunction (e.g., because) and must be joined to an independent clause:
Because he looks like Groucho Marx, he won five hundred
dollars in a contest. Dependent clause Phrases A phrase is a
group of related words that work together as a single part of speech.
It is not a clause because it lacks a subject and/or predicate:
Under the old refrigerator,…
Running from the Energizer Bunny… Essential
and Nonessential Clauses and Phrases Essential or
“restrictive” clauses and phrases cannot be removed from a sentence
without changing its meaning. They
usually begin with that or who.
Horses that are overly nervous are usually not good for
trail riding.
Carla Davis is the only senior who won scholarships to four
colleges. Nonessential or
“nonrestrictive” clauses and phrases add information, but they are not
necessary to the meaning of the sentence.
They are set off by commas and usually begin with which, whom, or whose:
The new Stallone movie, which
has a great soundtrack, starts this weekend.
Joe, whom I love like a brother, is moving away tomorrow. CONSTRUCTING SENTENCES Subject (Write for College 807-808)
Predicate Sentence beginnings Vary your sentence
beginnings to add style to your writing.
Try writing some sentences beginning with each of the following: Adjective:
word(s) that describe a noun:
Small and green,
the turtle stood looking at the audience.
Exhausted, the rabbit fell across the finish line thirty
minutes after the turtle.
Adverb:
word(s) that describe a verb:
Boisterously,
the crowd yelled for David Bowie to get the show started.
Indignantly and arrogantly, the tabby cat turned her back on
the cat show.
Prepositional
phrase:
a phrase that contains a preposition (at, on, over, through, under,
between, etc.) and the object of the preposition:
During the summer
my brother skateboards everyday.
In another nine months, the dude will get his driver’s
license.
Participial
phrase:
Since a participle is a verb that can function as an adjective
(e.g., melting ice cream), a participial phrase is one that
consists of a participle and its modifiers and complements:
Remembering
that she had a child, Bertha searched the store for her son.
Past:
Exhausted
from doing sit-ups, the flabby senior collapsed on
the sofa. Purchased
just a few days ago, his gold class ring
flashed in the sun.
Adverb
clause:
a dependent clause (subject and verb that can’t stand alone) that
describes how, what, where, when, or why.
It always begins with a subordinating conjunction (after,
although, as before, when, where, while, etc.):
Before she could give her speech, Clara fell off the stage.
While the paramedics came, they resuscitated her. Appositive
phrase:
a noun and its modifiers that stand beside another noun to explain
or identify it:
An innocent bystander, Martin gasped at the crime he
witnessed.
A red Mustang, my sister’s car was hit by a speeding
vehicle of joy riders. SENTENCE TYPES Use a variety of
sentence types to add style to your writing. Simple
sentences contain just
one independent clause: I hate spiders. Compound
sentences contain two or
more independent clauses that are joined by a semicolon or a comma and a
coordinating conjunction like and:
I hate spiders; tarantulas are the worst.
I hate spiders, but I do not mind snakes. Complex
sentences contain an
independent clause (underlined) and one or more dependent clauses
(italicized):
Although I do not mind snakes, I hate spiders. Compound-complex
sentences contain two or
more independent clauses (underlined) and one or more dependent clauses
(italicized):
Although I hate spiders, I do not mind snakes, and I
like lizards. SOLVING WRITING PROBLEMS Run-ons and Fragments Avoid fragments
and run-ons, including comma splices. A fragment
is a group of words written as a sentence but missing a subject, a verb,
or some other essential part. The
missing element causes it to be an incomplete thought: Fragment: Mark Twain said that at the age of fourteen. He was convinced that his parents were among the stupidest people on the face of the earth. (This is a fragment followed by a sentence. Correct it by combining the fragment with the sentence.) Sentence:
Mark
Twain said that at the age of fourteen he was convinced that his parents
were among the stupidest people on the face of the earth.
Fragment:
When he reached
twenty-one. (This clause does not convey a complete thought.
What happened when he was twenty-one?) Sentence:
When
he reached twenty-one, he was amazed at how much they had learned in only
seven short years.
A run-on
sentence is the result of two sentences run together without
adequate punctuation or a connecting word: Run
on:
Smoke started
billowing from under a Rolls Royce in Beverly Hills then the driver doused
the flames with a bottle of Evian water. Correct:
Smoke started
billowing from under a Rolls Royce in Beverly Hills; then the driver
doused the flames with a bottle of Evian water.
(Semicolon has been added.) A comma
splice is a sophisticated kind of run-on sentence in which two
sentences are connected (“spliced”) with only a comma.
A comma is not strong enough to connect two independent clauses; a
period, semicolon, or conjunction is needed: Splice:
The
two teams faced off, neither one could make any yardage. Correct:
The
two teams faced off, but neither one could make any yardage.
(Conjunction has been added.) Splice:
My
brother just got his senior yearbook, he was voted “most likely
to have his picture in the yearbook again next year.” Correct:
My
brother just got his senior yearbook.
He was voted “most likely to have his picture in the yearbook
again next year.” (Comma
has been changed to a period.)
Correct:
Our
Boy Scout leader said that if we get lost in the woods at night, we should
get our bearings from the sky; a glow will indicate the nearest
shopping center.
(Comma
has been changed to a semicolon.) VERB PROBLEMS Shifts in Tense Avoid unnecessary
shifts in tense of verbs. Switching
back and forth between present, past, and/or future tense creates an
awkward and confusing effect. Stick
to the tense you start with unless there is an excellent reason for
changing: Wrong:
The
disc jockey reads the dedication but failed to play the
song.
present
past
Right:
The
disc jockey read the dedication but failed to play the song.
past
past
Subject and Verb Agreement Make sure that a
verb agrees with its subject (singular or plural):
A young woman lives next door.
Young women live next door.
Singular subject and verb
Plural subject and verb
Hint:
Do not be confused by other words coming between the subject and the
verb:
The
student as well as her parents is invited to
honors night.
singular subject
singular
verb Use a plural verb
with compound subjects connected with and:
Making the soccer team and keeping up my grades are my two highest
priorities. Use a singular
verb with these singular indefinite pronouns:
either, neither, one, everybody, another, anybody, everyone,
nobody, everything, somebody, and someone:
Everybody is going to the dance after the game.
Either Joe or Sal is giving me a ride home at 11 p.m.
Hint:
Do not be confused by other words coming between the pronoun and the
verb: Each
of the three girls is planning to buy a new outfit
for the dance. singular
pronoun
singular verb Some other
indefinite pronouns (all, any, half, most, none, and some)
may be either singular or plural depending on the meaning of the sentence:
Some of the show was hilarious.
Some of the actors were hilarious.
All of the homework seems simple.
All of the exercises seem simple.
Half of the popcorn was gone.
Half of the cokes were gone. When the subject
follows the verb, as in questions and in sentences beginning with here
and there, be careful to find the subject and make sure that the verb
agrees with it:
There are many hardworking students on the honor roll
this semester.
plural verb plural
subject Active and Passive Voice
Passive:
The
island was deluged by a hurricane. Active:
A
hurricane deluged the island.
Passive:
A
dangerous rescue was made by volunteers after dark, but no sharks were
encountered. Active:
Volunteers
made a dangerous rescue after dark but encountered no sharks.
PRONOUN PROBLEMS Pronoun Agreement
Make sure that a
pronoun agrees with its antecedent. The
antecedent is the noun (or pronoun) that the pronoun refers to or
replaces:
When Matilda dances, she makes the whole dance floor
sway and bounce. antecedent pronoun Use a singular
pronoun to refer to such antecedents as each, either, neither, one,
anyone, anybody, everyone, everybody, somebody, another, and nobody:
Everybody must learn how to turn his car alarm off.
Either Sue or Jane needs to let me borrow her
vocabulary book.
Hint:
Often an error in pronoun agreement is made to avoid sexism.
When pronouns such as a person or everyone
are used to refer to both sexes or either sex, you should
either offer optional pronouns or rewrite the sentence in
the plural form:
Optional pronouns:
Everybody
must learn how to turn his or her car alarm off.
Plural form:
People
must learn how to turn their car alarms off. Nominative and Objective Cases of Pronouns Use the nominative
case when the pronoun describes the subject of a clause.
Usually the nominative pronoun describes who or what is doing the
action. The following are
nominative: I, you, he, she, it, we, they, who, whoever.
I
wish that he had a new glove. They
need to get one for him before the next game. Otherwise
Steve and he are going to warm the bench.
Who
can pick out one without a hole in it? Use the objective
case when the pronoun describes the direct or indirect object of
the sentence, in other words, when it describes who or what is receiving
the action. An objective pronoun should also be used within a
prepositional phrase when the pronoun is the object of the preposition.
The following are objective pronouns:
me, you, him, her, it, us,
them, whom, whomever.
Throw the ball to her; she’s
open.
(Her
is the indirect object of the verb throw.) My dad is taking my brother and me
to practice. (Brother
and me are direct
objects of the verb is taking.) Dwayne sat behind Norman and us. (Norman and us
are the objects of the preposition behind.) We did not hear whom the coach had named. (Whom is the direct object of
the verb had named.)
Clear Pronoun Reference
Avoid ambiguous
references that occur when the pronoun could refer to more than one
antecedent:
Joe is a big Bugs Bunny fan; he (?) taught me
everything I know about comedy.
(Which one taught me about comedy, Bugs Bunny or Joe?) Avoid confusing
general references by always following such words as this or that with a noun: Confusing:
The
Padres won their game last night even though Tony Gwynn struck out.
That could be the turning point of the season.
Clear:
That game could be the turning point of the
season.
Misplaced and Dangling
Modifiers
Avoid misplacing
modifiers by placing them next to the word they modify.
Misplaced modifiers have been placed incorrectly, making the
meaning of the sentence unclear: Misplaced:
They
sold an assortment of exercise equipment for active people with a
lifetime guarantee. Correct:
For
active people, they sold an assortment of exercise equipment with a
lifetime guarantee.
Misplaced:
The thief decided to run when he saw the
police officer abandoning the stolen vehicle and dashing into the
woods. Correct:
When he saw the police officer,
the thief decided to run, abandoning the stolen vehicle and dashing into
the woods. Avoid dangling
modifiers that appear to modify a word that isn’t in the
sentence: Dangling:
Carrying a heavy stack of trays,
her foot caught in the doorway. Correct:
Carrying a heavy stack of trays, Jenny
caught her foot in the doorway. Dangling:
Adjusting the binoculars,
a dizzy-headed jay was finally spotted. Correct:
Adjusting the binoculars, Audrey
finally spotted a dizzy-headed jay.
Parallel Structure Maintain parallel
structure by expressing parallel ideas with the same tense or structure of
words or phrases in a sentence:
Wrong:
We
learned how to change a tire, shift sixteen gears, and once almost
ran the truck off the road. Correct: We learned how to change a tire, shift sixteen gears, and keep the truck from running off the road. Wrong: I have mowed the lawn, washed the dog, rescued our hamster, and went to the store all in one day. Correct: I mowed the lawn, washed the dog, rescued our hamster, and went to the store all in one day. Wrong:
Water
skiing
no longer interests me as much as to go scuba diving. Correct:
Water
skiing
no longer interests me as much as scuba diving. USING THE RIGHT WORD
For
more information and examples, see Strunk and White’s The Elements of
Style: http://www.bartleby.com/141/strunk3.html
Formal: I have many jelly beans in my lunch. accept/except: accept means “to receive or take”; except means “to leave out”:
I will happily accept your offer of a free lunch.
Except for Joe, everyone has really cool purple shoes.
affect/effect: affect is a verb that means “to influence”; effect is most commonly seen as a noun that means “result,” but it is also used as a verb that means “to bring about”:
The love potion had a strange effect on Rosie.
I ran for office to effect change in our school. all
right: all right is
always two words; there is no such word as alright:
I’ll be all right once I catch my breath. among/between:
among
refers to three or more
persons or things; between refers to only two persons or things:
Among
the three of us, we could not produce a single good idea.
However, between you and me, we have enough money for lunch.
amount/number:
amount
refers to a quantity that cannot be counted; number refers to a quantity that can be counted:
A
great amount of water flooded my bathroom when I left the tap on.
A large number of water drops splattered on my windshield. bad/badly: bad is always an adjective; badly is always an adverb:
The
bad child was sent to his room.
There he practiced badly on his tuba.
I feel bad (ill).
I feel badly (have an inferior tactile sense). beside/besides: beside means “next to”; besides means “in addition to”:
Besides Newt, everyone on the team got new tennis shoes.
I stood beside Newt when he sunk the first shot.
can/may:
can
indicates ability; may indicates permission:
I can solve algebra problems. You may go to the restroom. fewer/less: fewer refers to quantities that can be counted; less refers to quantities that cannot be counted. (Same rule as amount/number):
You
can count scoops of ice cream but not ice cream in
general.
I got less ice cream than she did. further/farther:
further
refers to a greater extent,
time or degree; farther refers
to a greater distance:
We will discuss post modernism further tomorrow.
I plan to go several inches farther on my next long-jump
attempt. goes/went:
Do not use go
or went
when you mean say
or said:
Then
she said (not goes), “No way!” hanged/hung:
A person is hanged;
everything else is hung.
The outlaw was hanged at high noon in the sycamore gulch.
The velvet Elvis painting hung prominently in the bathroom.
Wrong:
I could of won. Right:
I could have won; I just didn’t
feel like it.
i.e./e.g.:
The Latin abbreviation i.e.
means “that is.” The
abbreviation e.g. means “for example”:
The
country’s leader (i.e., the president) declared war.
I love candy (e.g., chocolate truffles). it’s/its:
Use its
to describe something that it possesses; it’s is the contraction of it is:
Without
its mother, the monster felt lonely and scared. It’s not whether you win or lose; it’s how you play the game. lay/lie:
The transitive verb lay
means “to put or place” (the subject does the action to something);
the intransitive verb lie means “to rest or recline” (the
subject does the action).
Please
lay your completed test on the table.
After that scare, I needed to lie down.
Hint:
Memorizing the principal parts
of these two verbs will help you use them correctly:
Infinitive Present
Participle
Past
Past Participle
Lie (to recline)
(is) lying
lay
(have) lain
Lay (to put)
(is) laying
laid
(have) laid past/passed:
Past
is a noun that means “history,” an adverb (e.g., He rode past),
or a preposition (e.g., Go past the store and turn left); passed
is the past tense of the verb pass:
In the past plagues wiped out vast populations.
Marcus rode past her house every day.
I passed Belinda in the hall. real/really:
Real is
an adjective; really is an adverb that describes the degree of an
adjective:
Her boyfriend bought her a real
diamond.
Because I’m really tired, I’ll go to bed now. regardless:
Regardless
means “without regard”; there is no such word as irregardless:
Regardless
of his natural talent, he did not make the team. rise/raise:
Rise means
“to move upward” (the subject does the action); raise means
“to lift or make something go up” (the subject does the action to
something else):
I plan to rise early to go
fishing.
The Boy Scouts will raise the flag at the ceremony. said/says:
Said is the past tense of the verb to
say;
says
is the present tense:
Yesterday
he said he wanted to quit. My
aunt always says, “Pretty is as pretty does.” slow/slowly:
Slow is
an adjective; slowly is an adverb:
The slow tortoise never
wins races.
After spraining his ankle, he slowly crossed the finish
line. that/which:
Use that to introduce essential clauses not set off by commas; use which to introduce nonessential clauses.
The
mirror that once hung in the front hall cracked.
(no commas) My
car, which has a sunroof, gets good gas mileage.
(commas) that/who:
Use who,
whom, or whose
to refer to people; use that or which
to refer to things.
Incorrect: I enjoy spending time with people that have
similar interests as me. Correct:
I enjoy spending time with people who have similar interests
as me. their/there/they’re:
To show possession, use their;
there is a place; and there is a contraction for they are:
Their
matching outfits make them look like twins.
I love the zoo; let’s go there.
They’re as slow as molasses in January. to/too/two:
To
is a preposition that can mean “in the direction of” or it can form
the infinitive of any verb. Too
means “also” or is an adverb indicating degree.
And two is a number:
Let’s go to the mall.
(preposition)
Jeff would like to go too.
(infinitive/ “also”)
It will be too crowded.
(adverb showing degree)
We will need to take two cars.
(infinitive/ number)
Try to avoid waking a sleeping alligator. well/good:
Good
is an adjective (modifies a noun); well is an adverb (modifies a
verb) that means “capably” or an adjective that means
“satisfactory” or “in good health”:
The good boy got a sticker as a reward for doing his
homework well.
I feel well.
Hint:
To test for who/whom, substitute he/him in the
sentence. If he
fits, use who; if him fits, use whom. who/whom:
Who
does the action; whom receives the action:
Who will feed the
dragon?
Whom will you take to the dance? your/you’re:
To show possession, use your;
you’re means “you are”:
Thanks
for letting me share your apartment.
You’re going to love this next tune.
PUNCTUATION AND MECHANICSFor more
information and practice exercises, see the Purdue University On-Line
Writing Lab web site: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/#punctuation Comma
A big, hairy
monster ate my homework.
I need to pack
my stamps, rocks, camera, weights, hair dryer, and hat. I must remember
to gas the car, check the map, and pack a sandwich.
I’ve never
tried fried liver, and I never will. However,
do not separate verbs that are part of a compound predicate: I also hate
broccoli and despise lima beans.
Introductory
word: Unfortunately,
that is not my car. Participial
phrase:
Running late, I
rushed out of the house without my shoes. Adverb
clause:
As
soon as we left the house, the phone rang.
Above my head
floated a hot air balloon. However,
you must use a comma after a series of prepositional phrases or a
single long one: Before the
office manager would hire me, I had to interview with the president of the
firm.
Nonessential:
The dragon,
which had gleaming teeth, set the house
ablaze. Essential:
The
man who is wearing the red jacket just dropped this umbrella. Nonessential:
The article was
about the Green Bay Packers, my favorite team. Essential:
Anna is wearing
the shirt she received for her birthday.
“Off with her
head,” the Queen of Hearts yodeled.
“In fact,” she bellowed on, “off with all their heads!”
1550 Hill Road,
Poway, CA 92064. Thursday,
October 17, 2001. Semicolon
Nobody will
ever win the battle of the sexes; there’s too much fraternizing with the
enemy.
On a dare I ate twenty-seven candy bars; I don’t think I’ll do
that again.
My brother was
arrested at the zoo just for feeding the pigeons; however, he was feeding
them to the lions. I didn’t take
my usual route to school; instead, I took a shortcut that took twice as
long.
Over vacation
we visited Paris, France; Venice, Italy; Vienna, Austria; and Madrid,
Spain.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
3.
Use a block quotation format when quoting
dialogue between two or more speakers:
During
the trial scene, Bob Ewell immediately shows his disrespect for both the
court and his family:
“Are
you the father of Mayella Ewell?” was the next question.
“Well,
if I ain’t I can’t do nothing about it now, her ma’s dead,” was
the answer.
(Lee 172)
4.
Also use block quotation format when quoting dialogue
between speakers in a play:
Mama
compares her children to a beloved plant:
Mama
(looking at her plant and sprinkling a little water on it): They
spirited all right, my children. Got
to admit they got spirit—Bennie and Walter. Like this little old plant
that ain’t never had enough sunshine or nothing—and look at it. . .
Ruth
(trying to keep Mama from noticing): You . . . sure . . . loves
that little old thing, don’t you?
(Hansberry 335)


1.
When quoting two or three lines of poetry, use a forward
slash [/] with one space on each side to show where each line
ends. Using the format for a
short quotation (see previous section), work the lines directly into the
text of your paper using quotation marks. [Note that the period at the end
of the quotation goes outside the final parentheses of the
citation]:
Juliet’s
innocence soon turns to passion when she tells Romeo in the balcony scene,
“My bounty is as boundless as the sea, / My love as deep; the more I
give to thee, / The more I have, for both are infinite” (1.2.141-43).
2.
When quoting more than three lines of poetry, use a block
quotation format. [Remember, no quotation marks!]:
Mercutio
shows his sarcasm about love when he mocks Romeo’s lovesickness for
Rosaline:
Romeo!
humors! madman! passion! lover!
Appear
thou in the likeness of a sigh;
Speak
but one rhyme, and I am satisfied!
Cry
but “Ay me!” pronounce but “love” and “dove.”
(2.1.9-12)
3.
When the quotation you are using begins in the middle of a
line, position the partial line as it appears in the text:
When
the exiled Romeo draws his dagger, Friar Lawrence scolds,
Hold thy desperate hand.
Art
thou a man? Thy form cries out thou art;
Thy
tears are womanish, thy wild acts denote
The
unreasonable fury of a beast.
(3.3.118-121)
Contractions
1.
Use an apostrophe to signify letter(s) left out of a word to form a
contraction:
don’t
= do n[o]t
she’d = she [woul]d
it’s
= it [i]s
2.
Use an apostrophe to signify one or more numbers left out of
numerals or words that are spelled as they are actually spoken:
class
of ’02
“Good mornin’!”
1.
Add an apostrophe and an s to form the possessive of
singular nouns, even if the noun ends in s:
Bob
Dylan’s voice
the kiss’s meaning
Dickens’s novels
2.
Add only an apostrophe to form the possessive of plural nouns
ending in s. If the
plural does not end in s, add ‘s to form the possessive:
the
Joneses’ father
the Padres’ last game
children’s library
3.
For the
possessive form of a compound noun or an indefinite
pronoun, place an apostrophe and an s after the last word:
mother-in-law’s
apartment Secretary of State’s telephone
everybody’s
someone else’s
anyone’s
4.
Possessive personal pronouns (his, hers, its, ours,
yours, theirs and the relative pronoun whose) do not
require an apostrophe.
parent’s car = one parent owns
boss’ office = one boss owns
parents’ car = two parents own
bosses’ office = many bosses own
When ownership is shared, the
apostrophe is also shared; use the possessive form only on the last item
in a series to indicate shared ownership:
Caitlin, Chris, and Joshua’s house = the house is shared by all three
When ownership is individual, each
noun in a series gets its own individual apostrophe and s:
Caitlin’s, Chris’s, and Joshua’s jackets = each has his or her own
jacket
1.
Capitalize the first word of a sentence.
Marco loves to slam dance.
2.
Capitalize the first word of a full-sentence direct quotation:
When Joe made it to first base, his coach screamed,
“Run to second!”
Lady Macbeth
foreshadows her future insanity when she tells her husband: “These deeds
must not be thought after these ways; so, it will make us mad”
(2.2.45-46).
Capitalize all proper nouns (those
which name a specific person, place, or thing), including:
1.
Names of people and official titles, either written before a name
or used in place of the proper noun:
Keanu Reeves
President John Kennedy
Alexander the Great
“Mr. President, will you answer questions at the
press conference?”
“Not if I can help it, Senator.”
2.
Geographical Names:
a.
towns, cities, states, capitals, countries, and continents:
Dallas
Australia
Russia
New York
b.
sections of the country or a continent:
the South
the Midwest
the Middle East
c.
streets, roads, highways:
Interstate 5
Route 66
Park Avenue
d.
land forms and bodies of water:
Lake Havasu
Iberian Peninsula
Sahara Desert
3.
Languages, races, nationalities, and religions:
French
Inuit
European Islam
Also capitalize nouns referring
to the Supreme Being and holy books:
God
Allah
the Lord
the Bible
the Torah
4.
Days of the week, months, holidays, or holy days:
This year, Hanukkah begins on Friday, December 6,
and Christmas is on a Monday.
5.
Historical time periods, events in history, and special events:
Renaissance
Vietnam War Kentucky
Derby
Senior Prom
6.
Names of organizations, associations, and teams:
San Diego Padres
Daughters of the American Revolution
Greenpeace
Republican Party
7.
Capitalize the first, last, and all other words in titles except
for articles, short prepositions, and coordinating conjunctions:
The Taming of the Shrew
Gone with the Wind
To Kill a Mockingbird
Los Angeles Times
Crime and Punishment
“Twist
and Shout”
Italicize
or underline the titles of long works that are
published or released by themselves, such as movies, books, record albums,
CD’s, magazines, newspapers, full-length plays, operas, pamphlets,
book-length poems, long musical compositions, legal cases, and the names
of ships and aircraft:
Romeo
and Juliet
(play)
Washington
Post
(newspaper)
Seventeen
(magazine)
Saving
Private Ryan (movie)
Quit
Smoking Now
(pamphlet)
Titanic
(ship)
Law
and Order
(television program)
The
Four Seasons
(musical composition)
Use quotation marks around the titles
of short works that are likely to be published or released
as part of a larger work, such as chapters of books; short stories; poems;
songs; articles in a magazine, newspaper, and encyclopedia; and episodes
of a radio or television program:
“To
Build a Fire” (short story)
“Partners
in Crime” (episode of The Cosby Show)
“Alien
Triplets!” (article in the National Inquirer)
“Rocky
Raccoon” (song on the Beatles’ White Album)
1.
Use italics to indicate a number, letter, or word that is being
discussed or used in a special way. You may also use quotation marks:
Is there an e or an a at the end of cemetery?
2.
Use italics for foreign words or phrases that are not part of
everyday speech.
The Cavalier poets lived by the motto “Carpe
diem!”, or “Seize the day!”
1.
Capitalize the days of the week and months. Each of the following
formats is acceptable:
December 31, 1999
31 December 1999
2.
When writing a date within a sentence, place a comma after the day
of the week, the date, and the year:
On Wednesday, January 1, 2000, I will be eighteen
years old!
3.
When only the month and day or only the month and year are given,
no punctuation is necessary:
We began rehearsals on December 10 but performed in
January 1997.
4.
When writing out times, use the numeral and a colon between the
hour and minutes. Write only the hour if there are no minutes.
Indicate morning or evening with the abbreviations a.m. and p.m.
Note that both abbreviations are lower case and that a period is
place after each letter:
Meet me at the subway station at 7 p.m. because the
movie starts at 8:10.
1.
Spell out numbers of one or two words; numbers of more than two
words are usually written as numerals.
ten
twenty-five fifty thousand
3 ½
101 2,020
2.
Use numerals to express numbers in the following forms: dates,
pages, chapters, decimals, percents, addresses, time, identification
numbers, and statistics.
June 8, 1996
44 BC
AD 79
3:30 p.m.
pages 29-37
chapter 7
Interstate 5
Spanish 7
27.6
2 percent
a vote of 23 to 4
1388 County Road
35 m.p.h.
5 milliliters
3.
When a number begins a sentence, always spell it out:
Two hundred thirty
people claimed to have seen UFOs in Alaska in 1996.
Nineteen ninety-two
was an incredible year for tracking paranormal behavior.
However, if this creates
awkward sentence structure, change the sentence:
Eight hundred and
ninety-five
people say they have talked to aliens within the last five years.
Within the last five years, 895 people say they have
talked to aliens.
4.
When numbers are used frequently in a document, such as in
scientific and technical writing, you may express all measurements as
numerals:
In 4 experiments of psychic phenomenon, 79 percent
of the couples could predict the correct sum of money 2 out of 3 times.
5.
When a mixture of numbers—some one or two words, some
longer—are used together, they should be kept in the same style:
How could a team of 5 couples discover what an
association of 2,250 scientists and economists could not?
6.
You may use a combination of words and numerals for very large
numbers:
1.5 million
3 billion to 3.2 billion
25 million dollars