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The word "I" is always capitalised. Sentences begin with a capital letter and end with a period (or question mark or exclamation mark).
Some of the commas I've suggested are not mandatory. I just feel they help make the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
110 days ago
Capital Letters, Commas, Punctuation, Question Marks, Exclamation Marks, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Colours, Friendships, Friends, Languages, Refinancing
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END ALL SENTENCES WITH A PERIOD (FULL STOP), A QUESTION MARK, OR AN EXCLAMATION MARK. 1 We've been walking in circles for the past hou r. I've already seen this house twice .-- period, not comma 2 This blue hat/pencil/one is the same one I had
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COMMON NEWBIE MISTAKES There's a good book called How Not To Write a Screenplay I've forgotten where I found this: 76 Things not to do When Writing a Screenplay 1. Don't put your name, address and phone number on the title page. 2.
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
mc
1 yr 144 days ago
Metaphors, Punctuation, Mistakes, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Colours, Writing, Arts, Sentences, Capital Letters, Exclamation Marks, Music, Numbers
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Forgotten where this came from. I 76 Things not to do When Writing a Screenplay 1. Don't put your name, address and phone number on the title page. 2. Don't do your homework when choosing a title. 3. Add subtitles below the
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
mc
1 yr 238 days ago
Metaphors, Punctuation, Mistakes, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Colours, Writing, Arts, Sentences, Capital Letters, Exclamation Marks, Music, Numbers
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At 18:44:19 on Sun, 4 Apr 2004, Maria Conlon (Email Removed) wrote in One thing I have learned through this thread is that ... after having had it somewhat patronisingly forced down my throat!) I suppose you are referring to my reply to your
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Children playing hide-and-seek, when they find a buddy in hiding, call out things like, "I(ve) found you!" (past or present ... on the whole conundrum, especially with regard to the difference in nuance between "I(ve) found
alt.usage.english
by
ian noble
5 yr 234 days ago
Regards, Tenses, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, Friendships, Colours, Usages, Punctuation, Languages, Present Tenses, Exclamation Marks, Degree
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No preview available.
alt.usage.english
by
de781
5 yr 348 days ago
Essays, Sentences, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Punctuation, Cartoons, Conversational, Underlining, Exclamation Marks
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What you write is true about the stressed word when ... "now" serves as a definite time reference to the present. The "now" in "(2) Now *that's* something I really hate" is a throwaway, in my opinion. It was meant
alt.usage.english
by
skitt
6 yr 21 days ago
Dialects, Commas, Business, Context, Sentences, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Punctuation, References, Career, Determiners, Exclamation Marks
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I understand that a declarative sentence containing a declarative quote would look something like Word word word "word word word." But what about in other cases, where the sentence and the quote inside it have differerent punctuation?
alt.usage.english
by
michael west
6 yr 97 days ago
Question Marks, Quotation Marks, Sentences, Countries, Colours, United States, American, Usages, Writing, Punctuation, Styles, Exclamation Marks
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