BASIC-GRAMMAR-1-Punctuation

Appendix 1
Punctuation

 

1. Capital 
♣ Use a capital letter for …
  • the first letter of a sentence.
  • the names of people and places: Wolfgang Amadeus, Mozart, Helen Keller, Jackie Chan, Madrid, New York, Hong Kong.
  • the names of countries, nationalities and languages: China/Chinese, France/French, Australia/Australian, English.
  • days of the week and months of the year (but not seasons): Monday, Thursday, April, September.
  • school subjects: English, Maths, Biology.
  • people’s titles: Mr Brown, Doctor Smith, President Obama.
  • the pronoun “I”: Martha and I live in Simpson Street.

 

 

 

2. End of a sentence
Normally, we end a sentence with a full stop “.”:
– I live in London.
3. Question mark
  Put “?” at the end of a question (not a full stop):
– Where do you live?

 

 

4. Commas
♣ Use commas for …
  • lists of nouns: I bought a pen, a book and a bag.
  • lists of adjectives: It’s an old, black, electric lamp.
  • conditional sentences when the if-clause comes first: If you leave now, you’ll catch the last train.

 

 

5. Apostrophe ” ’ “
♣ Use an apostrophe for …
  • for possessive’s (see Unit 3.4⇒): Karen’s mobile. My brother’s T shirt.
  • contracted verbs forms. Here are some common examples:
  Verb to be
I’m = I am
he’s = he is
they’re = they are
isn’t = is not
aren’t = are not
  would like
I’d like = I would like
I wouldn’t like = I would not like
  Verb to have
I’ve = I have
she’s = she has
we’ve – we have
hasn’t = has not
haven’t = have not
  Negative modals
won’t = will not
wouldn’t = would not
mustn’t = must not
can’t = cannot
couldn’t = could not
shouldn’t = should not
  Auxiliary verb to do
don’t = do not
doesn’t = does not
didn’t = did not