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ELA 3: Mark My Words 68 Views


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Description:

Today's lesson is about using proper punctuation for your writing. It's important to make sure that your words and phrases are marked correctly. Imagine having a character scream "Fire, fire, help." Yeah, that doesn't sound too urgent, does it?


Transcript

00:04

[Coop and Dino singing]

00:13

Writing realistic dialogue can be tough after all you can't have

00:17

characters grunting at each other for an entire book [A couple grunting while eating a meal]

00:19

well maybe you could but it'd be pretty weird book and there's a whole lot of

00:23

rules we have to follow to make sure our dialogue is clear to the reader but [Man nailing rules to a wall]

00:26

never fear we've got some handy dandy tools in our dialogue tool belt and it's

00:31

fashionable to so one important tool at our disposal our dialogue tags [Coop discussing dialogue tags]

00:35

those are simply phrases that identify who said what and we guarantee you've

00:39

seen these before stuff like he said or she said...those are dialogue tags [Examples of dialogue tags]

00:43

they come in handy because the more people are speaking the more important

00:47

it is for the reader to know who's saying what it can be hard enough

00:50

keeping track of a multi-person conversation in person [Lots of people having separate conversations]

00:53

just imagine what it's like when those people don't even have distinct faces

00:56

actually don't imagine that kind of freaky anyway these guys can be as [Boy runs away from faceless people at a dinner table]

01:00

descriptive as you want for example if a woman whispers

01:03

something you can use the tag she whispered or if a man screams something [Man wearing black sunglasses walks into library]

01:07

you can use the tag he screamed we just hope he was polite enough not to scream

01:10

in anyone's ear... There are also a lot of rules that cover the punctuation of

01:14

dialogue one major one is that we use a comma to separate the dialogue tag from [Dino teaching the punctuation of dialogue]

01:19

the actual dialogue so if some guy who works at a pet store picks up a dog and

01:23

says this is a terrier we'd write that as he said comma this is a terrier with [Man holding a terrier dog]

01:28

a comma-separating the dialogue tag from the actual dialogue we could also flip

01:31

the dialogue tag in the dialogue making sure that we continue to separate them

01:35

with a comma we could even add some more text to either side of the dialogue and

01:39

all we need is comma's on either side of the quote to keep it separated turns out

01:43

it's much easier to separate texts for dialogue that it is to separate terrier [Terrier chewing on man's tie]

01:47

from your favorite tie.. The only time this comment separation thing doesn't work is

01:51

if we're dealing with questions or exclamations say the guy now asks the

01:55

terrier are you eating my tie? If any texts came before the dialogue we'd [Man asks terrier if it is eating his tie]

02:00

still separate the two with a comma but if any text comes after the question mark remains in

02:05

place and does the separating same thing happens if it's an explanation like

02:09

you're eating my tie! and yeah he totally is oh and one last

02:13

thing the punctuation that ends dialogue always stays inside the quotation marks

02:17

no matter where the surrounding text happens to be unlike a hungry terrier

02:21

punctuation never manages to escape [Terrier runs away from man holding ties]

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