ºìĞÓÖ±²¥app City University | Punctuation Help

ºìĞÓÖ±²¥app

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Punctuation Help

Hyphen — Hyphenate compound adjectives only if required for clarity: “fastest-growing companyâ€; “high-level discussion.†Don’t use hyphens with commonly understood terms, adverbs that end in ly and between figures and units of measure: “greatly exaggerated claimsâ€; “2 percent rule.†Do not use a hyphen with a compound modifier after the noun: “The driver was well paid.â€

Dash — Dashes set off a series within a phrase: “Of the many breakfast options — omelets, waffles, pastries — he only wanted coffeeâ€; indicate a break in thought: “Felipe’s is a popular eatery — in Harvard Squareâ€; or attribute a quotation to an author: “‘You must do the thing you think you cannot do.’ — Eleanor Roosevelt.†When using text editors that don’t support dashes, use two hyphens for each dash.

Comma — Use a comma to set off a person’s town of residence, age and other such information: “Tom Menino, Boston, was a popular speakerâ€; “Jean Dupont, 32, was released yesterday.†See Oxford Comma entry for ºìĞÓÖ±²¥app’s preferred style.

Period — Use only one space after the end of a sentence. Period.

Colon — Capitalize the first word after a colon only if it’s followed by a complete sentence. Colons go outside quotes unless they’re part of the quoted material.

Apostrophe — An apostrophe indicates possession. Add an ‘s to all single nouns and names, even if they already end in an s: “My boss’s vacation begins tomorrow.†For singular proper names ending in s, use only an apostrophe: “Kansas’ crisis.†For plurals of a single letter, add an apostrophe and an s: “Mind your p’s and q’s,†“the Oakland A’s.†Do not use apostrophes for decades or acronyms: the 1990s, CDs.

Quotation marks — Periods and commas go inside quote marks: “‘Reginald, your hairstyle makes me nervous,’ she said.†The position of dashes, semicolons, exclamation and question marks depends on what’s being questioned or exclaimed: “Was she right to say, ‘Your shoes are a joke’?â€

Parentheses — AP style suggests avoiding parentheses when possible, and instead rewriting text or using dashes or commas to set off the information. If parentheses are required the rules are: If the parenthetical is a complete, independent sentence, place the period inside the parentheses; if not, the period goes outside.

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