Mechanics
Spelling
What do we mean by spelling?
A group of letters representing a word.
Capitalization
What do we mean by
capitilaization?
The act or process of capitalizing.
Rules of Capitalization
1. Names of
people
2. Names of
mountains, mountain ranges, hills and volcanoes
3. Names of
bodies of water (rivers, lakes, oceans, seas, streams and creeks)
4. Names of
buildings, monuments, bridges and tunnels
5. Street
names
6. Schools,
colleges and universities
7.
Political divisions (continents, regions, countries, states, counties, cities
and towns)
8. Titles
of books, movies, magazines, newspapers, articles, songs, plays and works of
art
9. The
first letter in a sentence
10. The pronoun I
Punctuation
Punctuation rules
Punctuation marks are symbols
which
- organize
the structure of written language,
- and
indicate intonation and pauses to be observed when reading aloud.
Punctuation marks are also used to
avoid ambiguity. For example, "woman, without her man, is nothing"
has a different meaning from "woman: without her, man is nothing"
This is a summary of punctuation
rules.
Read the punctuation rules and study
the examples given.
End punctuation marks:
1. Full stop , or period (.)
- Used a full
stop at the end of a sentence:
She stood up and went away. She was furious. - Used for
abbreviations:
Co. (Company)
M.P. (Member of Parliament)
2. Question marks (?)
- Question
marks are used at the end of direct questions:
Where do you live?
Are you crazy?
Did you do the homework? - Use a
question mark at the end of tag questions:
You will help me, won't you?
He likes soccer, doesn't he?
3. Exclamation marks (!)
- Used to
indicate strong emotions:
She's so beautiful!
What a nice girl!
How interesting! - Used after
interjections:
Oh! It's awful.
Hi! What's up?
Commas (,)
- Commas are
used between items in a series or list. The last two items of the series
usually do not need a comma between them. They are separated by
"and".
I like spaghetti, fish, pizza and couscous. - Commas are
also used between adjectives or adverbs:
I'd like to have a big, black, German car.
She speaks slowly, quietly and eloquently. - After the
street address and city in an address:
34 Hassan II Street, Rabat, Morocco. - Before or
after direct speech:
He said,"I hate being treated like that."
"I'm sorry", she replied. - Before a
coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)
He woke up late, so he had to drive to work.
Semicolons (;)
- Semicolons
are used instead of a full stop or period to separate independent
sentences:
They woke up early; then they went jogging. - Use a
semicolon to separate items in a series when those items contain
punctuation such as a comma:
They visited the Eiffel Tower, Paris; Big Ben, London; and the statue of liberty, New York
Colons (:)
- Use a colon
to introduce a list:
He visited three cities last summer holiday: Madrid, Roma and Athens. - To
introduce an idea or an explanation:
He had one idea in mind: to see her as soon as possible. - To
introduce direct speech or a quotation:
The secretary whispered in his ear: "Your wife is on the phone. "
Dashes (--)
- To
introduce parenthetical information:
I put on a blue jacket --the one my mother bought me-- and blue jeans. - To show an afterthought:
I explained to him my point of view-- at least I tried!
Apostrophes (')
- Use an
apostrophe to indicate a missing letter or letters in a contraction.
I'm fed up with his stories - Use an
apostrophe plus the letter "s" to show possession.
My brother's girlfriend is such a sweet girl.
Quotation marks ("")
- Quotation
marks are used to quote speech, sentences or words.
She said, "I love you.
i like your example about punctuation :
ردحذف"woman, without her man, is nothing" has a different meaning from "woman: without her, man is nothing"