Joe said, "The garden is watered!"
No, the sentence is not punctuated correctly. It should be "The new editor-in-chief's accomplishments are impressive," as "editor-in-chief" is a compound noun and requires a possessive form to indicate ownership of the accomplishments.
The sentence is not punctuated correctly. It should read, "Everyone, even Mickey, thought that the cereal tastes yucky." The commas after "Everyone" and "Mickey" are necessary to set off the phrase that adds additional information. Additionally, "though" should be corrected to "thought."
It should be--- Marge said, "The train is just leaving."
The title of a documentary is treated like any other title. Within a sentence it is placed in italics and punctuated like a part of speech. At the top of the film if it is a simple sentence, it does not receive punctuation. You use commas when absolutely necessary for clarity.
This sentence can be punctuated in two different ways, with different meanings: "George Gray" said Mary Beth, "is on the phone."; and George Gray said, "Mary Beth is on the phone". The sentence could also be used without additional punctuation; in that instance, it would have the same substantive meaning as the latter of the two sentences punctuated with quotation marks but would not imply that George Gray used the exact words quoted to convey the meaning that Mary Beth was waiting on the other end of a telephone connection.
Joe watered the garden; however, the plants did not grow.
No, the sentence is not punctuated correctly. It should end with a question mark since it is a question. The corrected sentence is: "Can you help me find the post office?"
It should be ---- Cars are expensive; motorcycles are dangerous.
The sentence should be punctuated as: "What a beauty!" exclaimed Susie.
It should be written like this: "Joe watered the garden; however, the plants did not grow". Or you could eliminate the semicolon altogether and use a comma as in: "Joe watered the garden, but the plants did not grow."B.This sentences uses a semicolon; the semicolon joins two complete sentences.
no. that sentence is punctuated correctly.
No, the sentence is not punctuated correctly. It should be "The new editor-in-chief's accomplishments are impressive," as "editor-in-chief" is a compound noun and requires a possessive form to indicate ownership of the accomplishments.
No, not everything is capitalized and punctuated correctly in the sentence. It should be: "Her short story entitled 'The Shower' won the first prize in the writing contest."
The sentence should be punctuated as: "The district attorney you're serious about has been arrested."
Unless it is the name of a specific garden, and so a proper noun, or it is the first word in the sentence, then it would not be in capitals.
You can not punctuate a sentence with a semicolon.
The mistake in the sentence is the lack of a question mark at the end. Since it is a question asking about who was seen at the party, it should be punctuated correctly as: "Who did you see at the party?" Additionally, "who" should be capitalized at the beginning of the sentence.