Elements of Language: 7th Grade - Capital Letters (Ch. 22)
About this resource
| Rating |
5.0 (1 votes) |
| Downloads |
97 |
| Views |
646 |
| Created |
Jan 14, 2009 |
| Level |
Not Given |
| Tags |
- activities
- Advance
- capitalization
- Exercises
- Grammar
|
Description
[FROM THE TEXT]
Rules for capitalization: Capitalize the first word in every sentence. The first word of a directly quoted sentence should begin with a capital letter, whether or not the quotation comes at the beginning of your sentence. Capitalize the first word in both the salutation and the closing of a letter. Capitalize the pronoun “I.” Capitalize proper nouns. A “proper noun” names a particular person, place, thing, or idea. Proper nouns are capitalized. A common noun names a kind or type of person, place, thing, or idea. A “common noun” generally is not capitalized unless it begins a sentence or is part of a title. Do not capitalize the names of school subjects, except course names followed by a numeral and the names of language classes. Capitalize proper adjectives. A “proper adjective” is formed from a proper noun. Most abbreviations are capitalized. Capitalize titles.
[ABOUT THE COURSE]
This online version of “Elements of Language” features your textbook and a variety of interactive activities. The First course is aimed at Seventh Graders. The Elements of Language Online Edition offers activities from these workbooks: * Communications * Sentences and Paragraphs * Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics Language Skills Practice * Chapter Tests in Standardized Test Formats. It provides practical teaching strategies, differentiated instruction, and engaging presentation tools that offer more ways to reach more students than ever before.
Comments
Loading...