PUNCTUATION
GUIDE BUSINESS
WRITING
LESSON ENGLISH HELP HYPHENS LEARNING FORMAT SAMPLE EXAMPLE
USAGE TIPS HELP
FORMAL WORK CAREERS SAMPLE STUDENTS PRACTICE TEMPLATE
BUSINESS LIFE SKILLS
Learn
proper punctuation for business letter writing.
BUSINESS WRITING LESSON:
HAVE
A HYPHEN OR TWO!
(Lesson 2: Basic Punctuation Tips)
In Lesson 1,
you learned about commas. In order to finish
brushing up on your punctuation, this lesson
contains tips about additional punctuation marks
that are often used incorrectly in business
writing.
Always
remember, these aren’t arbitrary rules designed
to irritate you; they’re designed to help make
written forms of communication clearer:
something that’s discussed in more detail in
Lesson Four. However, they can also help make it
more enjoyable to read, too! An article or
report that uses nothing but short sentences
with commas and periods is going to seem awfully
monotonous after just a few minutes of reading.
Learning these tips will help you create
easy-to-read business documents that keep your
readers’ attention at the same time.
BUSINESS
WRITING PROPER PUNCTUATION
SEMI-COLONS
• Semi-colons (the comma with
the dot above it) are most often
used in two main places: lists
where the items in the list have
commas in them and to join two
sentences together. We covered
joining two complete sentences
with a semi-colon in Lesson 1,
so now let’s take a look at
long, complex lists.
Example – Developing healthful
habits includes many things such
as eating foods that are
nutritious, but that fit your
medical needs as well;
exercising daily, within your
current health parameters; and
balancing the four main aspects
of life: mental, emotional,
physical, and spiritual.
The example is punctuated
correctly. Note that if the list
used commas to separate its
elements, the commas within the
elements plus the others would
create confusion as to which
phrases went with each element.
COLONS
• A good rule of thumb to follow
on using a colon is that there
should always be a complete
sentence on one side or the
other, and perhaps even both.
Typically, a colon signals that
additional clarification is
coming after it.
Example – The importance lies in
balancing the four main aspects
of life: mental, emotional,
physical, and spiritual.
The example is correct in that
it contains a complete sentence
to the left of the colon. Notice
that the information after the
colon helps clarify something
before it, what the four main
aspects of life are.
• Colons are often used
incorrectly, especially to lead
into bulleted or numbered lists.
Example – The top priorities
are: o mental o emotional o
physical The example is
punctuated incorrectly due to
the first rule listed above for
colons. to the left of the colon
is a sentence fragment “The top
priorities are.” and to the
right of it is just a list. In
order to keep the colon, the
fragment on the left needs some
kind of noun phrase or subject
complement to turn it into a
complete sentence. A common and
easy way to correct this is to
change it to “The top priorities
are listed as follows:” However,
you might also choose to just
leave the colon out completely,
but leave the text as is. (Also,
note that a bulleted or numbered
list does NOT have punctuation
at the end of each item unless
that item is a complete sentence
and requires a period at the
end.)
QUOTATION MARKS
• Quotation marks are used for a
variety of things in writing,
the most common being dialogue.
That subject could take up a
lesson by itself, but suffice it
to say that business writing
doesn’t have much call for
dialogue. The other place
quotation marks are often used
in writing, and especially
business writing, are to offset
a particular word or phrase.
This is becoming less and less
common with the advent of word
processing programs that allow
for easy insertion of a bold,
italicized, or highlighted font
type. However, quotation marks
can still form a useful part of
any writer’s toolbox.
Example – In the previous
sentence, the words “bold,”
“italicized,” and “highlighted”
all refer to methods of
offsetting particular pieces of
text to give them emphasis.
The example is punctuated
correctly. Note the commas after
“bold” and “italicized.” One of
the most common mistakes writers
make is placing those other
punctuation marks behind the
second half of the quotation
mark, like this: “...the words
‘bold’, ‘italicized’, and
‘highlighted’...” Another common
– and lazy – error is to just
include the entire list in
quotation marks: ...’bold,
italicized, and highlighted’...”
Neither of these is correct
according to conventional usage
rules. Also note that,
regardless of whether a double
or single quotation mark is used
originally, singles always go
inside doubles.
HYPHENS
• On your computer keyboard, the
key after the 0 (zero) on the
top row is a hyphen. It’s a
shorter punctuation mark than a
dash. A dash is actually
comprised of two hyphens put
together and is used completely
differently.
Hyphens were previously used to
break a word into syllables –
and still connect it – when it
wouldn’t fit on one line. With
computers, that problem is
alleviated completely due to
automatic spacing of letters.
However, there are still
hyphenated words in the English
language, and more are coming
into use as various disciplines
progress.
Example – “State-of-the-art” is
a hyphenated word that’s been
around for while, but
“high-speed” and “voice-over,”
from the Information Technology
field, are fairly new.
You can typically check the
spelling of hyphenated words
that have been around a long
time with a standard
spell-checker. From the example,
the first hyphenated word will
likely be spelled the same way
no matter where you check. But
hyphenated words that have only
recently come into being – like
the second two in the example –
likely aren’t in them. For that
matter, the newer words probably
don’t have an actual convention
for spelling/punctuation yet! A
general rule of thumb is that
when two words commonly go
together as a noun, they aren’t
hyphenated. But when you use
those same two words together as
an adjective, they have a hyphen
between them. (Example – Our
connections run at high speed
VS. We offer high-speed
connections.)
DASHES
• As noted above, dashes are
actually two hyphens,
side-by-side. Most word
processing programs today have a
feature that allows you to
always link two hyphens so that
they form a long dash. Dashes
are used for a variety of
things, the most common being to
replace commas around
non-restrictive phrases and
clauses and to connect two ideas
– or even sentences – together.
Example 1 – The payments –
disability and retirement – come
from the same Social Security
Trust Fund account. Example 2 –
The software provides security
from intermediate level hackers
– and peace of mind for you!
In example 1, you can see that
the text between the dashes is
just additional information and
not needed to restrict the
“kind” of payment being
discussed. And example 2
connects two dissimilar ideas.
The first part of example 2 is a
technical statement, but the
writer has chosen to connect the
personal statement – almost as
an afterthought. The method in
the second example helps create
variety in sentence structure,
and variety is one of the things
that helps keep your readers’
interest levels high.
ELLIPSES
• An ellipsis is a series of
three periods in a row. In the
“old” days, an ellipsis (notice
a single one ends in “-is” and
the plural ends in “-es”) was
only used to say that
information was missing. For
example, let’s say I wanted to
write part of the above sentence
in order to discuss it. I might
choose not to write out the
entire sentence again: “In the
sentence above, the section that
reads “In the ‘old’ days...” The
ellipsis says that in the
original, there was more text
after the word “days.”
However, the Computer Age has
again made inroads into the
possible use of the ellipsis.
The ellipsis is commonly
used...in internet chat rooms
and instant messenger
programs...to replace a variety
of punctuation marks.
Example – Some people now use it
virtually the same as the
dash...it might replace a comma,
a semi-colon, a colon, or even a
period.
This practice hasn’t been
recognized yet as an “official”
writing convention. Most readers
see it as the “lazy” writing of
someone who doesn’t want to
learn correct conventions. But
like the dash, the ellipsis –
used sparingly – can add variety
to your writing.