Mastering English Grammar - Semicolons and Colons
Mastering English Grammar - Semicolons and Colons
Mastering English Grammar - Semicolons and Colons
Part 1
Below is a simple matching exercise. For each of the left-hand sentences,
determine which list from below should appear to the right of the colon.
left-hand sentences:
1. Eyes in shining pairs blinked from the roadside (:)
2. For many years Americans of all political stripes have been searching and
arguing about what it will take to offer a good education for all American
kids (:)
3. The small adobe home belonging to Susan Ulery was packed with people
(:)
right-hand lists:
Mormons, non-Mormons, Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians,
attorneys, carpenters, climbers, artists, teachers, and old hippies
less structure, more discipline, racial integration, ethnic academies,
increased funding, higher standards, multicultural curriculum, computers,
school vouchers
foxes, agoutis, maybe wild cats
Part 2
Once again you are given the left-hand sentence. This time you compose
right-hand lists of your own.
4. As they looked out over the prairie, they saw the herds of several animals
(:)
5. We were given these national parks to study (:)
ANSWERS 9
1. Eyes in shining pairs blinked from the roadside (:) foxes, agoutis, maybe
wild cats.
2. For many years Americans of all political stripes have been searching and
arguing about what it will take to offer a good education for all American
kids (:) less structure, more discipline, racial integration, ethnic
academies, increased funding, higher standards, multicultural curriculum,
computers, school vouchers.
3. The small adobe home belonging to Susan Ulery was packed with people
(:) Mormons, non-Mormons, Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians,
attorneys, carpenters, climbers, artists, teachers, and old hippies.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS
4. As they looked out over the prairie, they saw the herds of several animals
(:) buffalo, cattle, sheep, and elephants.
5. We were given these national parks to study (:) Redwood, Yellowstone,
Olympic, and the Grand Canyon.
Lesson 10: A Colon and a Sentence
A colon can precede a sentence. Here is the pattern:
sentence (:) sentence
Here is a sentence that illustrates the pattern:
Carlo begins to understand (:) people do throw away perfectly good stuff.
Note that we are not capitalizing after the colon.
This pattern is quite similar to the semicolon pattern we learned earlier:
semicolon pattern: sentence (;) sentence
colon pattern: sentence (:) sentence
The difference? With the colon pattern, the right-hand sentence goes back
and explains something from the left-hand sentence.
In the example above, we wonder What is it that Carlo is beginning to
understand? The right-hand sentence then answers our question. After
reading the right-hand sentence, we say to ourselves, Oh, that’s what Carlo
was beginning to understand.
The semicolon gives us no such relationship. Though the two sides of a
semicolon sentence are closely related, they do not depend on one another—
as is the case with colon sentences.
To clearly see this difference, read these two examples. As you do, analyze
the relationship between the right-hand and left-hand sentences:
semicolon pattern: Carlo begins to understand (;) Carly begins to get
more confused.
The left-hand and right-hand sentences are quite similar, but the right-hand
sentence does not explain the left-hand sentence.
colon pattern: Carlo begins to understand (:) people do throw away
perfectly good stuff.
Here, the right-hand sentence does explain the left-hand sentence.
A Note on Punctuation
Study this example:
“Alliteration” is less subtle than “consonance” or “assonance” (;) it may
even sound comic, reminding us of a tongue twister.
In the example above, note the semicolon sitting outside the quotation marks.
While periods and commas get tucked inside quotation marks, semicolons
and colons remain outside quotation marks.
YOUR TURN 10
Part 1
Another simple matching exercise. For each of the left-hand sentences,
determine which right-hand sentence from below should appear to the right
of the colon.
left-hand sentences:
1. But here’s a simpler reform (:)
2. Every second kid you meet seems to be suffering from a kind of kindling
restlessness (:)
3. Some people will tell you that the shift from car to truck can be explained
simply (:)
right-hand sentences:
we Americans are getting, um, bigger in the beam.
strike all off-street parking requirements from the law books and leave it
to property owners to decide how much parking to provide.
he shadow-boxes Coke machines and asks you to repeat what you just
said.
Part 2
Once again you are given the left-hand sentence. You compose right-hand
sentences of your own.
4. If we decide to accept, I will make one condition (:)
5. Basi-Reed urged the people present to conduct their own private
experiment (:)
ANSWERS 10
1. But here’s a simpler reform (:) strike all off-street parking requirements
from the law books and leave it to property owners to decide how much
parking to provide.
2. Every second kid you meet seems to be suffering from a kind of kindling
restlessness (:) he shadow-boxes Coke machines and asks you to repeat
what you just said.
3. Some people will tell you that the shift from car to truck can be explained
simply (:) we Americans are getting, um, bigger in the beam.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS
4. If we decide to accept, I will make one condition (:) you will need to take
the shopping cart back to the cart return area instead of leaving it here in
the middle of the parking space.
5. Basi-Reed urged the people present to conduct their own private
experiment (:) people should try going without television for twenty-four
hours.
Lesson 11: A Colon and a Phrase or Clause
In the last two lessons we have practiced placing lists and complete sentences
after colons. Here in this lesson we will practice using phrases or clauses.
A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb; a phrase
contains a subject or a verb or neither. However, for this lesson,
distinguishing between the two won’t be an issue. Whether it is a phrase or a
clause, we will simply think of it as a group of words that is less than a
complete sentence.
Here is the pattern:
sentence (:) phrase or clause
And here is an example of the pattern:
That is the best reincarnation I can imagine (:) to be a cricket on
someone’s hearth.
YOUR TURN 11
Part 1
This Your Turn is like the last two—except that you will working with
phrases and clauses instead of lists or sentences.
For each of the left-hand sentences, determine which phrase or clause from
below should appear to the right of the colon.
left-hand sentences:
1. That, finally, is the only “power” that advertising really proffers (:)
2. Thus the traveler, arriving, sees two cities (:)
3. Whereas thousands of men, women, and children undertake the long
journey to Tucson each winter for one reason only (:)
right-hand phrases or clauses:
to fulfill the need of the body to lie on the ground overnight without
freezing to death.
merely an imaginary pose before the camera.
one erect above the lake, and the other reflected, upside down.
Part 2
Once again you are given the left-hand sentence. You compose right-hand
phrases or clauses of your own. The phrase or clause you add must complete
the unfinished business begun by the left-hand sentence.
4. In the first place, any control children obtain comes at a price (:)
5. But he’d find a much larger source of untapped energy by looking
somewhere else (:)
ANSWERS 11
1. That, finally, is the only “power” that advertising really proffers (:) merely
an imaginary pose before the camera.
2. Thus the traveler, arriving, sees two cities (:) one erect above the lake, and
the other reflected, upside down.
3. Whereas thousands of men, women, and children undertake the long
journey to Tucson each winter for one reason only (:) to fulfill the need of
the body to lie on the ground overnight without freezing to death.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS
4. In the first place, any control children obtain comes at a price (:) the loss
of creativity.
5. But he’d find a much larger source of untapped energy by looking
somewhere else (:) his grass clippings.
Lesson 12: A Colon and a Short Phrase or Single
Word
We have practiced placing lists, sentences, and phrases or clauses after
colons. The sentence pattern we will look at in this lesson is similar to the
others, except that this pattern furnishes more dramatic impact, more punch.
By placing a word or short phrase after a colon, we create a build-up, a
dramatic pause, and a powerful closure.
Example:
There on the carpet the detective saw what he had been looking for (:)
blood.
In this example, the left-hand sentence creates the build-up, the sense of
suspense; the colon provides the pause; the single, powerful word after the
colon concludes our sentence with a zesty finish.
By terminating our colon sentences with short phrases or single words, we
create dramatic conclusions. Some of our dramatic conclusions will be less
dramatic than the detective and his sighting of blood; nevertheless, when a
single word or short phrase follows a colon, some degree of dramatic
conclusion is inevitable.
YOUR TURN 12
Part 1
This Your Turn follows the format of the last three—except that this time you
will complete the left-hand sentences with short phrases or single words.
left-hand sentences:
1. And then I did my own unbelievable thing (:)
2. But this time I want to say before anything else (:)
3. They have a word for it (:)
right-hand short phrases or single words:
growth.
Don’t worry.
I left.
Part 2
Once again you are given the left-hand sentence. You create short phrases or
single words that gives a little dramatic punch to what the left-hand sentence
has left unfinished.
4. The space between the buildings and the street now had one function (:)
5. This condition even has a name (:)
ANSWERS 12
1. And then I did my own unbelievable thing (:) I left.
2. But this time I want to say before anything else (:) Don’t worry.
3. They have a word for it (:) growth.
Grammatically, “I left” and “Don’t worry” are complete sentences, but they
do qualify as short and punchy.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS
4. The space between the buildings and the street now had one function (:)
trash.
5. This condition even has a name (:) psoriasis.
Lesson 13: Answering Questions
In the last four lessons we have practiced placing lists, sentences, phrases,
clauses, short phrases, and single words after colons. While completing these
exercises, we may have believed that we were learning different functions of
the colon, but we were not. In reality, the colon always serves the same
function, regardless of what words appear to the right.
This one rule (as you may have already deduced by now) is this:
The words to the right of the colon go back and explain something from
the left of the colon that had been left unexplained.
Another way of saying this is that the left-hand words leave the reader with
an unanswered question; the right-hand words answer that question.
Here are four sentences taken from the previous four exercises. Let’s see how
this question-answering principle works in these examples:
first example: an educated person must possess useful knowledge
unanswered question: What knowledge?
answer supplied by the right-hand list: how to build a house, how to grow
food, how to make clothing
second example: Carlo begins to understand
unanswered question: Understand what?
answer supplied by the right-hand sentence: people do throw away
perfectly good stuff
third example: that is the best reincarnation I can imagine
unanswered question: What is?
answer supplied by the right-hand phrase: to be a cricket on someone’s
hearth
fourth example: there on the carpet the detective saw what he had been
looking for
unanswered question: What did he see?
answer supplied by the right-hand list: blood
YOUR TURN 13
For each of the following, determine what unanswered question from the left-
hand side gets answered by the words to the right of the colon. Use the
examples above as models.
1. George and I are currently working on two more book projects (:) one
about corporate welfare and the other on the philosophy that underlies our
economic system.
2. Grandmama fed me cherries and showed me the secret of her hair (:) five
metal hairpins come out and the everyday white coil drops in a silvery
waterfall to the back of her knees.
3. I should now list the goods that can profitably be bought here (:) agate,
onyx, chrysoprase, and other varieties of chalcedony.
4. Matrix reality was about patriotism, national honor, and heroic causes—
but true reality was on another plane altogether (:) that of economics.
ANSWERS 13
1. George and I are currently working on two more book projects (:) one
about corporate welfare and the other on the philosophy that underlies our
economic system. [What are they? or What projects?]
2. Grandmama fed me cherries and showed me the secret of her hair (:) five
metal hairpins come out and the everyday white coil drops in a silvery
waterfall to the back of her knees. [What secret?]
3. I should now list the goods that can profitably be bought here (:) agate,
onyx, chrysoprase, and other varieties of chalcedony. [What goods?]
4. Matrix reality was about patriotism, national honor, and heroic causes—
but true reality was on another plane altogether (:) that of economics.
[What plane is that?]
Lesson 14: Semicolons in Lists
We completed a thorough study of the primary uses of semicolons and colons
—eight lessons for the semicolon and five lessons for the colon.
There still remain, however, a variety of more specialized semicolon and
colon functions to be explored:
semicolons in lists, with coordinating conjunctions, and with more than
two sentences;
colons with quotations, in titles, and with less than a complete sentence to
the left.
Semicolons in Lists
Normally, we use commas to separate items in a series. The standard items in
a series pattern looks like this:
item 1 (,)
item 2 (,)
and item 3
But what if one (or more than one) of our items contains commas of its own?
If so, we will need to use semicolons to separate our items. Our new pattern
will look like this:
item with one or more commas of its own (;)
item with one or more commas of its own (;)
and item with one or more commas of its own
Note that it is not necessary for all three items to contain their own commas;
if even one item in the list contains a comma of its own (an internal comma),
the semicolons are necessary.
Compare the wrong and right examples below:
wrong: Advertisers include
Peterson’s House of Stained Glass (,)
Mrs. Gagne (,) lead church organist (,) available for weddings and other
private functions (,)
and Tippy’s Florist.
right: Advertisers include
Peterson’s House of Stained Glass (;)
Mrs. Gagne (,) lead church organist (,) available for weddings and other
private functions (;)
and Tippy’s Florist.
In this example, the second item includes two commas of its own. Because of
those two commas, each item in the series must be separated by semicolons.
When writing, we must never forget our readers. In the first example above,
readers are likely to assume that they are looking at items in a series. But
when they try to read lead church organist as an item separate from Mrs.
Gagne, they will experience hesitation or momentary confusion.
Compare this with the second example. In this example, the heavier and more
substantial semicolons are brought in to separate the three items and to avoid
the confusion caused by the internal commas.
The terms internal and external commas help us to understand why we call
in some semicolons to do the heavy lifting. Let’s use IC to represent internal
commas and EC to represent external commas:
wrong: Advertisers include
Peterson’s House of Stained Glass (EC)
Mrs. Gagne (IC) lead church organist (IC) available for weddings and other
private functions (EC)
and Tippy’s Florist.
In this example, the internal and external commas are performing two
different jobs. The internal job is a lighter job, in this case separating one part
of a phrase from the other parts of the phrase. The external job is the bigger
job: these are the marks that indicate where one item ends and another
begins. What we want to avoid is asking a single mark—in this case, commas
—to perform more than one job in a single sentence; hence the semicolons
are enlisted to replace the external commas.
YOUR TURN 14
Each of the three sentences that follow contains items in a series. At least one
of those items will contain one or more internal commas.
Your task is to determine which commas should convert to semicolons. In
each series, determine where each item begins and ends. By doing this, you
will be able to identify those commas that need to convert to semicolons.
1. It’s in a neighborhood of other small houses like it where, at one time, we
knew all the families (:) Mrs. Berry in the pale blue house who used to
give us divinity (,) the Clarks in the white colonial with the playhouse and
fish pond (,) the Phillips in the vanilla two-story who threw birthday
parties for their bulldogs (,) the Zimmermans across from them who took
us arrowhead-hunting on rainy Saturdays (,) Mr. Cook (,) diagonally (,)
who helped my father on the car and had a cat lovingly named Cat.
The fifth item above contains internal commas.
2. My classmates in parochial school in the center of town near the cathedral
came from widely scattered neighborhoods (:) the middle-class area of
two-story brick bungalows east of Cheseman Park (,) the Five-Points
neighborhood near downtown (,) home to much of Denver’s small black
population (,) the Westside (,) where most Mexican-Americans lived (,)
and North Denver (,) an area heavily represented by working-class Italian-
Americans.
The second, third, and fourth items above contain one internal comma each.
3. When invited somewhere to speak, I send a sheet ahead of time asking
organizers for an environment-friendly event (:) paper instead of plastics
(,) no Styrofoam (,) real flatware and dinnerware (,) biodegradable
flatware (,) recycled paper for the fliers and the press releases (,) services
provided (,) if possible (,) by local businesses (,) locally grown and
organic food (,) which is preferred for meals or receptions (,) receptacles
for recycling (,) carpooling encouraged.
ANSWERS 14
1. It’s in a neighborhood of other small houses like it where, at one time, we
knew all the families (:)
Mrs. Berry in the pale blue house who used to give us divinity (;)
the Clarks in the white colonial with the playhouse and fish pond (;)
the Phillips in the vanilla two-story who threw birthday parties for their
bulldogs (;)
the Zimmermans across from them who took us arrowhead-hunting on
rainy Saturdays (;)
Mr. Cook (,) diagonally (,) who helped my father on the car and had a cat
lovingly named Cat.
The fifth item above contains internal commas.
2. My classmates in parochial school in the center of town near the cathedral
came from widely scattered neighborhoods (:)
the middle-class area of two-story brick bungalows east of Cheseman Park
(;)
the Five-Points neighborhood near downtown (,) home to much of
Denver’s small black population (;)
the Westside (,) where most Mexican-Americans lived (;)
and North Denver (,) an area heavily represented by working-class Italian-
Americans.
The second, third, and fourth items above contain one internal comma each.
3. When invited somewhere to speak, I send a sheet ahead of time asking
organizers for an environment-friendly event (:)
paper instead of plastics (;)
no Styrofoam (;)
real flatware and dinnerware (;)
biodegradable flatware (;)
recycled paper for the fliers and the press releases (;)
services provided (,) if possible (,) by local businesses (;)
locally grown and organic food (,) which is preferred for meals or
receptions (;)
receptacles for recycling (;)
carpooling encouraged.
The sixth item above contains two internal commas; the seventh contains one
internal comma.
Lesson 15: Semicolons with Coordinating
Conjunctions
Using semicolons with coordinating conjunctions is similar to using
semicolons in lists: in both cases, semicolons are performing jobs that are
normally reserved for commas; in both cases, semicolons must step in to
rescue our poor, overworked commas from trying to perform two separate
tasks at once.
One of the most common English sentence patterns is this basic compound
sentence:
sentence (,) COORDINATING CONJUNCTION sentence
The coordinating conjunctions are the seven FANBOYS words: for, and, nor,
but, or, yet, so.
Normally, we place a comma between the left-hand and right-hand sentences,
just in front of the conjunction. But what if there are other (internal) commas
on the left-hand side? Or on the right-hand side? Or on both sides? In such
situations, we must find the comma that appears in front of the conjunction
and upgrade that comma to a semicolon—thus distinguishing that mark from
the other, weaker commas appearing in other places.
The standard compound-sentence pattern looks like this:
sentence (,) COORDINATING CONJUNCTION sentence
But our new pattern looks like this:
sentence with one or more commas of its own (;) COORDINATING
CONJUNCTION sentence with one or more commas of its own
Note that it is not necessary for both the sentences to contain their own
commas; if either the left-hand sentence or the right-hand sentence contains a
comma of its own, we use a semicolon just before the conjunctions.
Example:
wrong: As to reward (,) my profession is its own reward (,) BUT you are at
liberty to defray whatever expenses I may be put to (,) at the time which
suits you best.
right: As to reward (,) my profession is its own reward (;) BUT you are at
liberty to defray whatever expenses I may be put to (,) at the time which
suits you best.
The wrong sentence contains three commas. Two of the commas give us
generic pauses; the middle comma, however, is the compound-sentence
comma, hardly a generic comma at all. Therefore, we upgrade that comma to
a semicolon, thus giving us the right version.
The concepts of internal (IC) and external (EC) commas can once again
provide us with greater clarity:
As to reward (IC) my profession is its own reward (EC)
BUT
you are at liberty to defray whatever expenses I may be put to (IC) at the
time which suits you best.
Here we can see clearly that the internal commas are interior: one to the left-
hand sentence, the other to the right-hand sentence. It is only the external
comma (which we upgrade to a semicolon) that sits outside either of the two
sentences.
YOUR TURN 15
For each of the following, decide which comma needs to be converted to a
semicolon.
1. Self-care at a friend’s home (,) school (,) or community center was
associated with increased levels of risk (,) and adolescents who spent their
time “hanging out” showed the highest levels of problem behaviors.
2. If we play our cards right (,) we can all get more out of life than we put
into it (,) but only if we play for keeps.
3. When they came to their country house (,) the merchant and his three sons
applied themselves to husbandry and tillage (,) and Beauty rose at four in
the morning (,) anxious to have the house clean and to have dinner ready
for the family.
ANSWERS 15
1. Self-care at a friend’s home (,) school (,) or community center was
associated with increased levels of risk (;)
AND
adolescents who spent their time “hanging out” showed the highest levels of
problem behaviors.
The left-hand sentence contains two internal commas; the comma before the
conjunction converts to a semicolon.
2. If we play our cards right (,) we can all get more out of life than we put
into it (;)
BUT
only if we play for keeps.
The left-hand sentence contains one internal comma; the comma before the
conjunction converts to a semicolon.
3. When they came to their country house (,) the merchant and his three sons
applied themselves to husbandry and tillage (;)
AND
Beauty rose at four in the morning (,) anxious to have the house clean and to
have dinner ready for the family.
The left-hand sentence and the right-hand sentence contain one internal
comma each; the comma before the conjunction converts to a semicolon.
Lesson 16: Semicolons with More Than Two
Sentences
Most commonly, semicolons link two sentences. However, they are capable
of linking more than two sentences. Theoretically, semicolons could link
any number of sentences, but in practice the number of sentences linked by
semicolons rarely exceeds three or four.
We can take our original pattern:
sentence (;) sentence
And add this new pattern:
sentence (;) sentence (;) sentence [and more could be added]
Example:
We would spend whole days driving around the South trying to see a man
about a bird (;) we strung mist nets in the woods and fields to catch them,
band them, and let them go again (;) we sent in all the names and dates
and where we caught them.
Most commonly, if a writer decides to string together a longer-than-usual
number of sentences joined by semicolons, it will be because the sentences
share some of the same words or the same structure. In the example above,
the parallel we provides the justification for the joining together of the three
sentences: we would spend . . . we strung . . . we sent . . . .
YOUR TURN 16
For numbers 1 and 2 of this Your Turn, answer the questions that follow the
example sentences. For numbers 3 and 4, you will practice creating strings of
sentences joined by semicolons by creating some material of your own.
1. For want of a nail the shoe is lost for want of a shoe the horse is lost for
want of a horse the rider is lost.
The sentence above needs two semicolons. Where should they be placed?
Explain why these three sentences are joined by semicolons.
2. Easy divorce laws have removed the need to work at relationships easy
credit has removed the need for fiscal self-control easy entertainment has
removed the need to learn to entertain oneself easy answers have removed
the need to ask questions.
The sentence above needs three semicolons. Where should they be placed?
Explain why these four sentences are joined by semicolons.
3. I wondered why I was thinking these things (;) I wondered what
wondering was, and why it was spooky (;)
Create a third sentence of your own to follow the second semicolon above.
The sentence you create should be parallel with the two that went before.
4. But he will gradually see the stars and the moon (;) he will then be able to
see shadows in the daylight thrown by the sun (;) then he will see objects
in the full light of day (;)
Create a fourth sentence of your own to follow the third semicolon above.
The sentence you create should be parallel with the three that went before.
ANSWERS 16
1. For want of a nail the shoe is lost (;) for want of a shoe the horse is lost (;)
for want of a horse the rider is lost.
The two semicolons belong after the first “lost” and the second “lost.” The
three sentences are joined by semicolons because of the parallel structure:
“for want of a BLANK the BLANK is lost.”
2. Easy divorce laws have removed the need to work at relationships (;) easy
credit has removed the need for fiscal self-control (;) easy entertainment
has removed the need to learn to entertain oneself (;) easy answers have
removed the need to ask questions.
The three semicolons belong after “relationships,” “self-control,” and
“oneself.” The four sentences are joined by semicolons because of the
parallel structure: “easy BLANK has removed the need (to or for) BLANK.”
POSSIBLE ANSWERS
3. I wondered why I was thinking these things (;) I wondered what
wondering was, and why it was spooky (;) I wondered whether other
people were thinking these same thoughts.
To remain parallel, the sentence you create should begin with “I wondered.”
4. But he will gradually see the stars and the moon (;) he will then be able to
see shadows in the daylight thrown by the sun (;) then he will see objects
in the full light of day (;) then he will see that the world is, indeed, a most
solid place.
To remain parallel, the sentence you create should begin with “then he will
see.”
Lesson 17: Colons with Quotations
Colons can precede quotations. Quotations can come in the form of spoken
words:
John E. Edgerton, president of the National Association of Manufacturers,
typified their response when he declared (:) “I am for everything that will
make work happier but against everything that will further subordinate its
importance.”
Quotations can also come in the form of written words:
Becker writes in Cross Currents (:) “At this time, the scientific evidence is
absolutely conclusive that 60-Hz magnetic fields cause human cancer cells
to permanently increase their rate of growth by as much as 1,600 per
cent.”
Even those statements that are presented as if they might be spoken or written
can be preceded by colons:
The next question, then, must be this (:) If he is going to write about
immigration, why doesn’t he do it in a sober, informed, logical manner?
Note:
With statements or quoted words appearing to the right of a colon, we do
capitalize.
The colons-with-quotations principle can apply even when quotation
marks are not present.
This use of the colon follows the answer the unanswered question
principle we studied earlier. In the three examples above, the right-hand
statements answer these questions: What did Edgerton declare? What did
Becker write? What is the next question?
This particular use of the colon is especially handy when we are quoting
sources in academic writing. At its most skillful, quoting involves the
blending of the writer’s own words with the source material’s words.
Consequently, quoting complete sentences often leads to clunky, awkward
results.
But the colon is capable of taking poorly blended quotations and gracefully
smoothing them over.
Example:
clunky: Though we have done an adequate job of keeping food production
ahead of population growth, this state of affairs might change in the near
future. “Modern agriculture is highly dependent on fossil fuels for
fertilizers” (Goodchild).
What makes this a poor example of academic quoting is that the quotation is
floating on its own, unattached to the rest of the material. But a single
application of the colon can turn these two separated sentences into a single
sentence, thus blending and attaching the quoted words:
graceful: Though we have done an adequate job of keeping food
production ahead of population growth, this state of affairs might change
in the near future (:) “Modern agriculture is highly dependent on fossil
fuels for fertilizers” (Goodchild).
YOUR TURN 17
This Your Turn consists of a short matching section. For each of the three
left-hand sentences you are given, determine which quotation or statement
from the bulleted list below should appear to the right of the colon.
left-hand sentences:
1. And now I heard, really for the first time (:)
2. He returned to San Francisco to give the client his recommendation (:)
3. In a New York Times op-ed piece, Fast Food Nation’s Eric Schlosser made
a telling observation about the USDA (:)
right-hand quotations or statements:
“Right now you’d have a hard time finding a federal agency more
completely dominated by the industry it was created to regulate.”
“We have come over a way that with tears has been watered / We have
come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered.” [the slash
mark tells us that these are two lines from a poem]
Move the company out of Micronesia and leave those islands the way they
are.
ANSWERS 17
1. And now I heard, really for the first time (:) “We have come over a way
that with tears has been watered / We have come, treading our path
through the blood of the slaughtered.”
2. He returned to San Francisco to give the client his recommendation (:)
Move the company out of Micronesia and leave those islands the way they
are.
3. In a New York Times op-ed piece, Fast Food Nation’s Eric Schlosser made
a telling observation about the USDA (:) “Right now you’d have a hard
time finding a federal agency more completely dominated by the industry
it was created to regulate.”
Lesson 18: Colons with Titles and Less-Than-
Sentences
Colons with Titles
Here is the standard format for titles of academic essays:
Creative Part (:) Straightforward Part
The creative part is meant to whet the reader’s appetite; often it is an
interesting phrase taken from the essay itself.
The straightforward part states the essay’s primary aim.
Examples:
Driven By Desire (:) Why the Global Economy Won’t Satisfy Us
Gonna Hawk Around the Clock (:) How Television Stole the Soul of Rock
and Roll
Note several details about these two examples:
The left-hand side does not flow directly into the right-hand side; instead,
each half is its own unit.
The rules of capitalizing titles apply. (The word to the right of the colon is
always capitalized.)
From the left-hand side, readers might be intrigued, but would have little
clue as to what the essay is about.
From the right-hand side, readers may or may not become interested, but
they do gain a clear picture of the essay’s content.
YOUR TURN 18
This Your Turn for this lesson is divided into two parts. The answers for both
parts follow the second section.
For numbers 1 and 2, create a right-hand side for each title; for numbers 3
and 4, create left-hand sides. Since you don’t actually know the content of
these hypothetical essays, be creative; use your imagination.
1. Fizzy Business (:) _______________
2. Igniting Minds (:) _______________
3. _______________ (:) Planning the Future of a Sinking Island
4. _______________ (:) Using Mountain Bikes to Reform Delinquents
Colons with Less-Than-Sentences
So far, every example we have encountered in these lessons and exercises has
had a complete sentence on the left-hand side—regardless of what appears on
the right-hand side. Here in this final lesson we will look at one exception to
this rule.
Examples:
Chapter One (:) What Is Education For?
Translation (:) My worldview doesn’t have room for Barbie in it, and I’d
be embarrassed to have her as a houseguest.
Once again, though we seem to be covering a variety of rules for using the
colon, each use boils down to the one primary use of colons: the material on
the right refers back to the material on the left. Note that in the two examples
above the left-hand material is less than a compete sentence. But note also
that the left-hand material leaves something unfinished:
Chapter One (:) Oh? What is Chapter One titled?
Translation (:) Oh? What is your translation of the original?
YOUR TURN (continued)
Again, be creative. For each less-than-a-complete-sentence left-hand side,
you create a right-hand side to go with it. Write out the complete answers
(both sides of the colon).
5. Editor’s note (:) _______________.
6. Seen on Highway 101 north of Solvang (:) _______________.
POSSIBLE ANSWERS 18
1. Fizzy Business (:) An Analysis of Common Ingredients Found in Soft
Drinks
2. Igniting Minds (:) The Effect of Science Fiction on Adolescents
3. Castles of Sand (:) Planning the Future of a Sinking Island
4. Where the Wheel Stops (:) Using Mountain Bikes to Reform Delinquents
5. Editor’s note (:) what follows is the second part of a three-part series.
6. Seen on Highway 101 north of Solvang (:) a “Follow me to the Tulip
Festival” sign hanging from a flatbed truck.
Semicolons and Colons Glossary of Terms
academic quoting: Colons can help rescue clunky quotations and turn them
into examples of skillful academic quoting.
colons with titles: Creative Part (:) Straightforward Part
colons: Can precede single words, lists, phrases, clauses, or sentences. With
colons, it’s not so much the grammar that matters as the logical relationship
between the left-hand and right-hand words. When the right-hand words
explain something that the left-hand side leaves unexplained, the colon is the
right punctuation mark for the job.
compound sentence: Two sentences joined together as one. This can be
accomplished with semicolons: left-hand sentence (;) right-hand sentence. It
can also be accomplished with colons: left-hand sentence (:) right-hand
sentence.
conjunctive adverbs: Often used in conjunction with semicolons: sentence
(;) CONJUNCTIVE ADVERB (,) sentence. Here is a list of common conjunctive
adverbs: besides, consequently, finally, first, for example, for instance,
furthermore, hence, however, instead, later, likewise, meanwhile, moreover,
nevertheless, next, now, otherwise, still, subsequently, then, therefore, thus.
Most conjunctive adverbs indicate one of the following relationships:
sequence of time, contradiction, similarity, causation, example.
internal and external commas: Applies to both items in a list and the
sentences being joined in a compound sentence. If any of the items in a list
contain internal commas, semicolons replace the external commas (the marks
separating one item from another). In a compound sentence, if either the left-
hand or right-hand sentence contains internal commas, semicolons replace
the external comma that normally sits to the left of the coordinating
conjunction.
mirror image sentence: The sentences best connected by semicolons. Mirror
image sentences commonly take the pattern of person A does this (;) person
B does that or thing A does this (;) thing B does that.
misplaced semicolons: If either the left-hand side or the right-hand side is
less than a complete sentence, the semicolon is not the correct punctuation
mark for the job.
more than two sentences: Yes, semicolons can link more than two
sentences.
preceding quotations: A slot that can be filled admirably by colons.
semicolons: Best used in the joining of two closely related sentences.
short conjunctive adverbs: first, hence, next, now, still, then, thus. With
these one-syllable conjunctive adverbs, the comma to the right of the
conjunctive adverb is often unnecessary.
sliding conjunctive adverbs to the right: A stylish writing device. The
conjunctive adverb however—along with a few others—can often be moved
to the right to create a more elegant sounding sentence.
Test Questions
The Test Questions section consists of 40 sentences divided into eight groups
of five sentences each. Each sentence is followed by five multiple choice
options. Within each group of five, each multiple-choice option gets used
once.
The sentences that follow have been stripped of their semicolons and colons.
The multiple-choice options describe how to fix the problem of the missing
semicolons and colons.
Some semicolons and colons would be placed in open slots; others would
need to replace commas. Some sentences will need more than one
punctuation mark; some sentences will need no added mark at all.
The list of conjunctive adverbs appears here:
besides, consequently, finally, first, for example, for instance, furthermore,
hence, however, instead, later, likewise, meanwhile, moreover,
nevertheless, next, now, otherwise, still, subsequently, then, therefore, thus
TEST PART 1
1. A fire is burning behind the prisoners between the fire and the arrested
prisoners, there is a walkway where people walk and talk and carry
objects.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand clause completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
e. the right-hand sentence contains an internal comma, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
2. Ashurbanipal was one of the rare ancient Middle Eastern rulers who was
literate, and his scribes amassed the first collected library in that area it
included scholarly texts and works on magic.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand clause completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
e. the right-hand sentence contains an internal comma, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
3. At some level, I fear that I like blackfly season for the same reason I like
harsh winters and bad roads because it heightens the adventure of living
here.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand clause completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
e. the right-hand sentence contains an internal comma, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
5. Because the survivors succeed, they will pass that advantage on to the
next generation therefore, the incidence of that trait will increase in the
population.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand clause completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
e. the right-hand sentence contains an internal comma, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
TEST ANSWERS PART 1
1. C) A fire is burning behind the prisoners (;) between the fire and the
arrested prisoners there is a walkway where people walk and talk and
carry objects. [add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences]
2. D) Ashurbanipal was one of the rare ancient Middle Eastern rulers who
was literate, and his scribes amassed the first collected library in that area
it included scholarly texts and works on magic. [do nothing—the
compound sentence is already connected by a comma and a coordinating
conjunction]
3. A) At some level, I fear that I like blackfly season for the same reason I
like harsh winters and bad roads (:) because it heightens the adventure of
living here. [add a colon to indicate that the right-hand clause completes
what the left-hand sentence had left unfinished]
4. E) At Westland Row Station a crowd of people pressed to the carriage
doors (;) but the porters moved them back, saying that it was a special
train for the bazaar. [the right-hand sentence contains an internal comma,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction]
5. B) Because the survivors succeed, they will pass that advantage on to the
next generation (;) therefore, the incidence of that trait will increase in the
population. [add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the
compound sentence]
TEST PART 2
6. Alliteration is less subtle than consonance or assonance it may even sound
comic, reminding us of a tongue twister.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
7. At the turn of the century in the central district of Lawrenceville there may
have been as many varieties of bread as there were languages.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
8. Eating safely involves three principles using common sense to evaluate the
condition of the found material, checking the area’s dumpsters regularly,
and seeking always to determine why the found material was discarded.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
9. Every selection you used as support material should appear in your Works
Cited page those not used should not appear.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
12. HE WAS LATE GETTING BACK TO THE THEATER TENT AND LATE GETTING TO THE
HOME OF THE STREET SWEEPERS THEN HE WOULDN’T TELL THEM WHERE HE HAD
BEEN.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
e. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
15. One is two years beyond where you now are the other is two years
behind where you now are.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
e. add a semicolon to join two mirror-image sentences
TEST ANSWERS PART 3
11. D) For just one brand, I had to decide between Original, Homestyle,
Pulp Plus, Double Vitamin C, Grovestand, Calcium, or Old Fashioned (;) I
also had to decide whether I wanted the 167-ounce, 32-ounce, 64-ounce,
96-ounce, or six-pack size. [add a semicolon to join two closely related
sentences]
12. C) He was late getting back to the Theater tent and late getting to the
Home of the Street Sweepers (;) then he wouldn’t tell them where he had
been. [add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound
sentence]
13. B) Here’s a secret you should know about mothers (:) we spy. [add a
colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished]
14. A) In the pasture behind our house are the butterflies you taught me to
love and name (:) swallowtails, monarchs, and viceroys. [add a colon to
indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand sentence had
left unfinished]
15. E) One is two years beyond where you now are (;) the other is two
years behind where you now are. [add a semicolon to join two mirror-
image sentences]
TEST PART 4
16. From the start, Arachne learned the craft well her skill soon surpassed
that of the other village weavers.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
17. I kept studying them until the connection registered these high-peaked
roofs perfectly echoed the shape of the vaulted ceilings we’d seen inside
every Mayan ruin we had visited.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
18. In “The Three Billy Goats Gruff,” the troll who lives under the bridge
becomes enraged when he hears the goats crossing the bridge.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
19. In the long run, men hit only what they aim at thus they had better aim
at something high.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
20. It is not the sunrise, which is flaring in the eastern sky it is not the rain
falling out of the purse of God it is not the blue helmet of the sky
afterward, or the trees, or the beetle burrowing into the earth it is not the
mockingbird who will go on clapping from the branches of the catalpa
that are thick with blossoms and that are shaking in the wind.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
TEST ANSWERS PART 4
16. C) From the start, Arachne learned the craft well (;) her skill soon
surpassed that of the other village weavers. [add a semicolon to join two
closely related sentences]
17. A) I kept studying them until the connection registered (:) these high-
peaked roofs perfectly echoed the shape of the vaulted ceilings we’d seen
inside every Mayan ruin we had visited. [add a colon to indicate that the
right-hand sentence completes what the left-hand sentence had left
unfinished]
18. E) In “The Three Billy Goats Gruff,” the troll who lives under the
bridge becomes enraged when he hears the goats crossing the bridge. [do
nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed]
19. B) In the long run, men hit only what they aim at (;) thus they had
better aim at something high. [add a semicolon before the conjunctive
adverb in the compound sentence]
20. D) It is not the sunrise, which is flaring in the eastern sky (;) it is not
the rain falling out of the purse of God (;) it is not the blue helmet of the
sky afterward, or the trees, or the beetle burrowing into the earth (;) it is
not the mockingbird who will go on clapping from the branches of the
catalpa that are thick with blossoms and that are shaking in the wind. [add
semicolons to join the series of sentences]
TEST PART 5
21. It isn’t so funny it doesn’t sound so good we are doing okay without it
we can get along without that kind of thing.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to precede the quotation
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. the right-hand sentence contains internal commas, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
22. MTV’s executives refused to air the video, much to Young’s disgust
“They’re supposed to be rebellious,” he complained in Rolling Stone,
“but haven’t got enough guts to show something that’s not middle of the
road.”
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to precede the quotation
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add semicolons to join the series of sentences
e. the right-hand sentence contains internal commas, so a semicolon is
needed before the coordinating conjunction
28. Now National Airlines had two problems it did not want to talk about
one of its airplanes crashing and it had to account for the $1.7 million
when it issued its annual report to its stockholders.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to precede the quotation
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
30. Sickly and frail, Stephen Crane didn’t attend school until he was eight
this wasn’t a major issue, however, for he far preferred baseball to books.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to precede the quotation
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a comma and
a coordinating conjunction
TEST ANSWERS PART 6
26. (C) I reined my horse to the brink of a lurid tarn and gazed down upon
the inverted images of the gray sedge, the ghastly tree stems, and the
eyelike windows (;) nevertheless, in this mansion of gloom I now
proposed to myself a sojourn of some weeks. [add a semicolon before the
conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence]
27. (E) My stepfather offered no objection to the marriage, but the terrible
event occurred within a fortnight of the day that had been fixed for the
wedding. [do nothing—the compound sentence is already connected by a
comma and a coordinating conjunction]
28. (A) Now National Airlines had two problems it did not want to talk
about (:) one of its airplanes crashing and it had to account for the $1.7
million when it issued its annual report to its stockholders. [add a colon to
indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished]
29. (B) Promoters of instructional technology have reverted to a much
more modest claim—that the computer is just another tool (:) “It’s what
you do with it that counts.” [add a colon to precede the quotation]
30. (D) Sickly and frail, Stephen Crane didn’t attend school until he was
eight (;) this wasn’t a major issue, however, for he far preferred baseball
to books. [add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive
adverb has moved to the right]
TEST PART 7
31. No matter how hard we looked we didn’t see cracks in the plaster.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand word completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
33. Socrates here reminds us that the business of rulers is not to make
themselves happy their happiness is to be realized in the happiness of
every citizen in the Ideal State.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand word completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
34. The authorities began to search for better ways to evaluate teachers,
and some have arrived at a radical solution you watch them teach.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand word completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
35. The body has limits that the machine does not have remove the body
from the machine, therefore, so that the machine can continue as an
unlimited idea.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand word completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon to join two closely related sentences
d. add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the conjunctive adverb has
moved to the right
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
TEST ANSWERS PART 7
31. E) No matter how hard we looked we didn’t see cracks in the plaster.
[do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed]
32. B) So we made a detour to inspect one of the notable antiquities on our
map (:) Uxmal. [add a colon to indicate that the right-hand word
completes what the left-hand sentence had left unfinished]
33. C) Socrates here reminds us that the business of rulers is not to make
themselves happy (;) their happiness is to be realized in the happiness of
every citizen in the Ideal State. [add a semicolon to join two closely
related sentences]
34. A) The authorities began to search for better ways to evaluate teachers,
and some have arrived at a radical solution (:) you watch them teach. [add
a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the left-
hand sentence had left unfinished]
35. D) The body has limits that the machine does not have (;) remove the
body from the machine, therefore, so that the machine can continue as an
unlimited idea. [add a semicolon to join two sentences in which the
conjunctive adverb has moved to the right]
TEST PART 8
36. The expression “pearl of great price” has come to mean anything that
is very valuable for example, Hester Prynne named her child “Pearl”
because she had given up all that she had in bearing the child.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. both the left hand and the right-hand sentences contains internal commas,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
37. Then it came to him he would buy more fields and rent them out to his
customers.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. both the left hand and the right-hand sentences contains internal commas,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
38. This incident, which created a great sensation, frightened away several
prospective buyers and when it began to be whispered that a ghost walked
the room at midnight, he decided to investigate the matter himself, so as to
put an end to the rumors.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. both the left hand and the right-hand sentences contains internal commas,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
39. Vavilov noticed a pattern genetic variation was not evenly distributed.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. both the left hand and the right-hand sentences contains internal commas,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
40. Winding paths lead out from the central plaza through the forest to
other places of interest temples, ball courts, stories carved in stone, and
mysterious clearings.
a. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list completes what the left-hand
sentence had left unfinished
b. add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence completes what the
left-hand sentence had left unfinished
c. add a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence
d. both the left hand and the right-hand sentences contains internal commas,
so a semicolon is needed before the coordinating conjunction
e. do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no semicolon is needed
TEST ANSWERS PART 8
36. C) The expression “pearl of great price” has come to mean anything
that is very valuable (;) for example, Hester Prynne named her child
“Pearl” because she had given up all that she had in bearing the child. [add
a semicolon before the conjunctive adverb in the compound sentence]
37. E) Then it came to him he would buy more fields and rent them out to
his customers. [do nothing; this is one sentence—not two—so no
semicolon is needed]
38. D) This incident, which created a great sensation, frightened away
several prospective buyers (;) and when it began to be whispered that a
ghost walked the room at midnight, he decided to investigate the matter
himself, so as to put an end to the rumors. [both the left hand and the
right-hand sentences contains internal commas, so a semicolon is needed
before the coordinating conjunction]
39. B) Vavilov noticed a pattern (:) genetic variation was not evenly
distributed. [add a colon to indicate that the right-hand sentence
completes what the left-hand sentence had left unfinished]
40. A) Winding paths lead out from the central plaza through the forest to
other places of interest (:) temples, ball courts, stories carved in stone, and
mysterious clearings. [add a colon to indicate that the right-hand list
completes what the left-hand sentence had left unfinished]
Titles in the Mastering English Grammar Series
ALL TITLES ARE AVAILABLE ON KINDLE OR IN PRINT
Parts of Speech
Book 1: Nouns and Adjectives
Book 2: Verbs and Adverbs
Book 3: Pronouns, Prepositions, and Conjunctions
Sentence Structure
Book 4: Subjects and Verbs
Book 5: Compound Sentences
Book 6: Complex Sentences
Punctuation
Book 7: Commas
Book 8: Semicolons and Colons
Book 9: Parentheses, Brackets, Dashes, Ellipses, Italics, and
Hyphens