1 / 10

Commas in a Series

Commas in a Series. RULE: Use commas with 3 or more items in a series EXAMPLES: I bought apples, oranges, and pears at the store. I danced, ran, and puked today. I danced in the rain, ran in the snow, and puked on my brother today. . No Commas in a Series…. I ran AND danced AND puked.

matteo
Télécharger la présentation

Commas in a Series

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. Commas in a Series RULE: Use commas with 3 or more items in a series EXAMPLES: I bought apples, oranges, and pears at the store. I danced, ran, and puked today. I danced in the rain, ran in the snow, and puked on my brother today.

  2. No Commas in a Series… • I ran AND danced AND puked. • I will shop OR dance OR cry today.

  3. Commas between Adjectives • RULE: Add commas to separate 2 or more adjectives of equal importance • EXAMPLES: • The large, fluffy dog panted in the sun. • The fluffy, large dog panted in the sun.

  4. Commas in a Compound Sentence • RULE: Use a comma AND a conjunction to join 2 independent clauses together. • Conjunctions: • and, but or, for, so, yet, nor • Examples: • The girl ran, yet the boy followed. OR, USE A SEMI-COLON: • The girl ran; the boy followed.

  5. Commas with Transitions • RULE: Use commas to separate transitions from the rest of the sentence. • EXAMPLES: • First, I ate. Then, I got sick. Afterwards, I felt better.

  6. Commas in Complex Sentences- see page 9 notes • RULE: Use a comma to separate a dependent clause from an independent clause. • HINT: The sentence needs to BEGIN with a subordinating conjunction. • Examples: Since the day I was born, I loved pizza. I loved pizza since the day I was born.

  7. Commas with Interrupters: Direct Address • RULE: Use a comma to separate the name of a person directly being spoken to • EXAMPLES: • Mary, brush your teeth. • Brush your teeth, Mary.

  8. Commas with Interrupters: Appositives • What is an appositive? • It is a phrase that renames the noun. • The underlined parts are appositives. • RULE: Use a comma(s) to separate the appositive from the rest of the sentence. • EXAMPLES: • Mrs. Robertson, our LA teacher, has a substitute. • Tornaodes, a type of vortex, are scary.

  9. Commas with Interruupters: Interrupting Phrases • What is an interrupting phrase? • It is a phrase NOT RELATED to the topic • It “butts” in. • RULE: Use a comma(s) to separate an interrupting thought. • EXAMPLES: • The boys, as you know, are smelly. • Children, I believe, love summer.

  10. Helpful Hint with Interrupters: • Interrupters can be taken OUT of a sentence and a sentence still remains. • Try it! Identify the type of interrupter first. Then, take the interrupter out. Are you left with a sentence? • Beagles, a type of hunting dog, love to howl. • Pizza, in my opinion, is the best food on the planet. • Can you shave your legs, Derek?

More Related