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6th Grade Videos 46 videos

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ELA 6: Punctuation Perfection 107 Views


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Description:

Parentheses, dashes, and commas--oh my! Grammar nerds, you're about to be in your parenthetical element.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

Today we're going to see which punctuation marks pair best with parenthetical elements,

00:07

because apparently, we don't have much of a life. [hand writing parenthetical elements on a white board]

00:09

….Huh.

00:10

…That's a hard realization, but just keeping it real.

00:12

….Anyway.

00:13

To get started, let's remember what a parenthetical element is all about. [parenthetical element definition]

00:17

It's a part of a sentence that gives extra information that isn't important to the meaning

00:21

of the sentence.

00:22

In other words, a parenthetical element can be snipped out of a sentence…[pair of scissors snipping out parts of sentence]

00:25

…and the sentence will still be as cool as a cucumber.

00:28

It won't have the light, watery flavor of a cucumber, so please don't try to eat the [cucumber shivering in the snow]

00:31

sentence.

00:32

You'd think we wouldn't have to say that, but people are endlessly surprising us…

00:37

We need some sort of punctuation to set off a parenthetical element from the rest of the

00:41

sentence, and it turns out we have three options.

00:43

Almost an embarrassment of riches… [money falling]

00:45

So we have commas, parentheses, and dashes.

00:49

However, which one we use isn't just a matter of random chance. [fruit machine spinning]

00:53

No one should rely on Vegas odds for good grammar.

00:56

And uh…be careful relying on Vegas odds in general. [white ball lands in a roulette wheel]

00:59

PSA over.

01:00

So we use commas to separate out a parenthetical element when the element includes a connecting

01:06

word.

01:07

Common connecting words include "which," "or," "if," "but," "so," "who," "where," "when," [list of connecting words]

01:13

and "although."

01:14

So in a sentence like "Our dog, although well behaved, is kind of terrifying"… [dog standing while on a leash]

01:19

…that "although" is a clear sign that we'll be separating out that parenthetical element

01:24

with commas.

01:25

It's also a sign that maybe you need some kind of mask for your dog…or maybe a rabies [dog wearing a minion mask]

01:30

test….

01:31

We use parentheses when the element doesn't include a connecting word, or if the element

01:35

is a complete sentence.

01:37

That means for a sentence like…"My favorite chair (the one with the bright orange spots) [a organge spotted chair]

01:43

is really comfortable"…

01:45

…the lack of connecting words is a clear sign that we're in for some parentheses.

01:50

And we might also be in for some interior decorating tips. [man thinking about the interior design of his bedroom]

01:53

Unless you're really, really into those bright orange spots.

01:56

We're not here to judge.

01:58

Finally, we use dashes when we really want to emphasize the parenthetical element.

02:03

In a sentence like "We could barely believe that Johnny—the shortest kid in class—could [Johnny spinning a basketball on his finger]

02:10

dunk a basketball"…

02:11

…Johnny's shortness is really important.

02:14

He basically has no other traits.

02:15

He's just a short blob.

02:16

…Sorry, Johnny.

02:18

Just keeping it real.

02:19

Anyway, we'd want to throw some dashes in there. [Dashes input into the sentence]

02:21

We'd also probably want to throw Johnny the ball. [Johnny dunking a basketball]

02:24

Man, that tiny blob can dunk…

02:26

And those are our three options.

02:27

Now we're going to go sob ourselves to sleep because seriously, this was our only plan [Man napping on a red chair]

02:31

for the day…

02:32

Maybe we can shoot hoops with that little blob creature…

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