1 / 26

Hyphens, Dashes, & Parentheses

Hyphens, Dashes, & Parentheses. Chapter 11. Here’s the idea…. Hyphens, dashes, and parentheses help make your writing clear by separating or setting off words or parts of words. Hyphens. Use a hyphen if part of a word must be carried over from one line to the next.

julie-welch
Télécharger la présentation

Hyphens, Dashes, & Parentheses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hyphens, Dashes, & Parentheses Chapter 11

  2. Here’s the idea… Hyphens, dashes, and parentheses help make your writing clear by separating or setting off words or parts of words.

  3. Hyphens Use a hyphen if part of a word must be carried over from one line to the next. • The word must have at least two syllables to be broken. Correct: num-ber Incorrect: co-de

  4. For example Ms. Walsh was extremely hap-py when her friends came to visit Chicago.

  5. Hyphens • Always separate words between syllables Correct: let-ter Incorrect: lette-r

  6. Hyphens • You must leave at least two letters on each line Correct: twen-ty Incorrect: a-cross

  7. Hyphens • Use hyphens in certain compound words. Examples: half-dollar great-grandmother

  8. Hyphens • Use hyphens in compound numbers from twenty-one (21) through ninety-nine (99) Examples: sixty-three twenty-six

  9. Hyphens • Use hyphens in spelled-out fractions Examples: two-thirds three-fourths

  10. Let’s Practice! When I take my cousins to the carnival, they love to go on the merry goround.

  11. My brother is thirty five years old.

  12. When I make oatmeal for breakfast, I have to include one fourth cup of boiling water.

  13. My great grandmother was named Ottilia.

  14. Last winter was terrible; it was extremely cold out side.

  15. My dad gets along well with my grandmother; his mother in law.

  16. Mrs. Lilly had a busy summe- r planning for her wedding.

  17. Next year, my brother will turn twenty one.

  18. The cookie recipe called for two-thirds of a cup of sugar.

  19. Dashes Use dashes to show an abrupt break in thought. Example: Louis Braille –who lost his sight at age three- invented an alphabet for blind people.

  20. Dashes Another example: Ms. Walsh - who fell and broke her arm at age 10- is deathly afraid of bunk beds.

  21. Parentheses Use parentheses to set off material that is loosely related to the rest of a sentence. Example: Each six-dot cell stands for a character (a letter of the alphabet, a number, a punctuation mark, or a contraction).

  22. Parentheses Another example: Mr. Agnew ate a pear (a yellow colored fruit) at lunch today.

  23. Let’s Practice! Decide: Should you use dashes or parentheses?

  24. My favorite holiday is Halloween ___ Kit Kats are my favorite candy.

  25. My mom grew up on a farm __ she likes to tell stories about her childhood __where they raised cattle and grew crops.

  26. It’s fun to run a marathon __ which is 26.2 miles in length __ as long as you have trained properly.

More Related