Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Miss Gay English 7

  • Slides: 11
Download presentation
Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Miss Gay English 7

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Miss Gay English 7

Dialogue is the exact words of a character. n Use quotation marks to show

Dialogue is the exact words of a character. n Use quotation marks to show where the dialogue begins and ends. n Ex: “Please sit down and be quiet, ” Miss Gay said to the class. n

Dialogue Rules Rule #1 - A direct quote begins with a capital letter. n

Dialogue Rules Rule #1 - A direct quote begins with a capital letter. n Rule #2 - The end mark goes inside the quotations. n Ex: Tom yelled with excitement, “We won the game!” n

Dialogue Rules Rule #3 - If a quotation comes at the beginning of a

Dialogue Rules Rule #3 - If a quotation comes at the beginning of a sentence, a comma follows it. (put the comma before the last quotation mark) n Ex: “Please sit down, ” she yelled. n Rule #4 - If a quotation comes at the end of a sentence, a comma comes before the quotation. n Ex: Tom said, “We won the game. ” n

Dialogue Rules Rule #5 - If a quotation is interrupted, a comma follows the

Dialogue Rules Rule #5 - If a quotation is interrupted, a comma follows the first part and precedes the second part. The second part of the quotation begins with a small letter. n Ex: “The time of the game, ” announced the coach, “has not been announced yet. ” n

Dialogue Rules Rule #6 - When a quotation consists of several sentences, put quotation

Dialogue Rules Rule #6 - When a quotation consists of several sentences, put quotation marks at the beginning and end of the quotation. n Ex: “Mom, please let me go. I promise I will be home by 9: 00. All of my friends are going to be there, ” Sara whined loudly. n

Dialogue Practice- Use punctuation to correct the following sentences. Who let a dog in

Dialogue Practice- Use punctuation to correct the following sentences. Who let a dog in here? he kept shouting. n The manager screamed somebody grab that dog! n The manager said don’t you know not to bring a dog into a grocery store n I’m calling the police the manager grumbled if you ever come back to this store. n

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags n n n Dialogue tags tell who is speaking and

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags n n n Dialogue tags tell who is speaking and how they are speaking. Dialogue tags allow the reader to hear the conversation. Ex: “Is anybody home? ” he said. Ex: “Is anybody home? ” the girl yelled with excitement. Ex: “Is anybody home? ” he whispered nervously. Ex: “Is anybody home? ” the monster roared.

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Types of dialogue tags: n Strong verbs- “Wow, he is

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags Types of dialogue tags: n Strong verbs- “Wow, he is so cute, ” she giggled. n Adding an adverb (-ly word)- “Wow, he is so cute, ” she giggled nervously. n Adding more information to the tag. “Wow, he is so cute, ” the shy girl whispered to her friend. n

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags- Identify and replace the boring tags. n “Try saying that

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags- Identify and replace the boring tags. n “Try saying that again to my face, ” said Eva. n “Be careful. They might hear us, ” she said. n The principal remarked, “Get in my office now. ” n “Uh. . I want to ask you something, ” said Kevin.

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags n With a partner, write ten sentences using dialogue. Remember

Dialogue and Dialogue Tags n With a partner, write ten sentences using dialogue. Remember your punctuation rules and use exciting dialogue tags. (Try to use several different types of dialogue. )