90 likes | 103 Views
This interactive bellwork lesson teaches students when to use quotation marks, italics, and underlining in their writing. It includes examples and practice quizzes.
E N D
Italics, Underlining, and Quotation Marks Bellwork (Guided notes) On Tuesdays, Wednesdays, & Thursdays we will begin each class with “bellwork”. Each Bellwork unit begins with a lesson and ends with a quiz. Refer back to your Guided Notes from the power point as you complete the daily bellwork. Most Bellwork units will take 2 weeks; the quiz will be on a Thursday
Fill in the blanks for the guided notes:1.When Do I Use “Quotation Marks”andWhen Do I Use Italics or Underlining ?
2. Quotations are used to set off titlesof short works.Examples: poemtitles report titlesshort story titlessong titles article titleschapter titles
3.Italicsare typed letters that lean to the right. Italicsare used to set off titles of long works. Examples:book titles play titlesmagazine titles newspaper titlestitles of television seriespainting titles boat or airplane names
4.You useitalics if you are typing.If you are writing by hand, you use underlining. (This is the ONLY time you underline. Most often you will be typing on the computer so you will italicize)
5.Do not italicize the word the, even when it is part of the titleof a newspaperExample:the New York Times On your paper, CIRCLE the word “the” so you will remember this rule
6.Do not italicize the name of thecity in which the newspaper is published unless that name ispartof the title.Example: the Hartford Courant. The name of the paper is just the Courant.QUESTION: Would you italicize the newspaper the New York Times? WHY?The New York Times
7.Use underlining (only if you are handwriting!) or italics for words,letters, andnumberswhen you are talking about the word, letter, or number itself.Example: Please write your two’s clearly.
8.Donot italicize when the number is being used as an adjective.Example: There were two cookies left on the table.