Friday, December 27, 2019

Creating Sentences With Commas Punctuation Practice

Confused on when and where to place commas in a sentence? Almost everyone gets rusty from time to time. Heres a little exercise that can help you learn when commas are necessary or to help you dust the cobwebs off of your already acquired skills. This sentence-imitation exercise will give you practice in applying the four guidelines for using commas correctly.   Instructions Use each of the four sentences below as the model for a new sentence of your own. Your new sentence should follow the guidelines in parenthesis and use the same number of commas as in the original. Example: The younger children spent the afternoon at Chuck E. Cheese, and the others went to the ball game.(Guideline: Use a comma before a coordinator—and, but, yet, or, nor, for, so—that links two main clauses.) Sample sentences: Vera cooked the roast beef, and Phil baked a pumpkin pie.Tom ordered steak, but the waiter brought Spam. Exercises I rang the bell and pounded on the door, but no one answered.(Guideline: Use a comma before a coordinator—and, but, yet, or, nor, for, so—that links two main clauses; do not use a comma before a coordinator that links two words or phrases.)I sent Elaine a basket full of apricots, mangoes, bananas, and dates.(Guideline: Use commas to separate words, phrases, or clauses that appear in a series of three or more.)Because the storm had knocked out the electricity, we spent the evening telling ghost stories on the porch.(​​Guideline: Use a comma after a phrase or clause that precedes the subject of the sentence.)Simone  LeVoid, who has never voted in her life, is running for the post of county commissioner.(Guideline: Use a pair of commas to set off nonessential words, phrases, or clauses—also called nonrestrictive elements—that interrupt a sentence.)

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