Commas and Punctuations
Abbreviations and Symbols
Quotations and Fact Checking
Spelling and Grammar
Formatting (The Signal and The Westside Express)
100

Question: Which sentence is punctuated correctly?
A) It's time to eat, Grandma!
B) Its, time to eat, Grandma!
C) Its time, to eat Grandma!
D) It's, time to eat Grandma!

Answer: A

Explanation: "It's" is the correct contraction for "it is," and commas are correctly placed to clarify the meaning.

100

What does “etc.” stand for?

Et cetera

100

Abraham Lincoln was widely quoted as saying, “Let them eat cake,” though historians now agree that there’s no evidence he ever said it.

This is incorrect, the correct answer is Marie Antoinette. 


100

Affect vs. Effect

 Affect = verb, Effect = noun (don't mess it up champ!)

100

Do we ever use Oxford commas?

NOOOOOOOOOO NEVER DO IT DIVA!!!!!!!!!!

200

Do you place a comma before the conjunction in a list?


No, unless clarity demands it.



200

What is the rule about ellipses when omitting part of a direct quote in journalism?



Use three periods with spaces: “ … ”. Four if bridging two sentences.



200

Verifying quotes, names, dates, and facts for accuracy.

What is fact checking?

200

They're / There / Their — which is the possessive one?



Their 

(It’s possessive — like your ex.)




200

Fix this headline: 

Girl Crashes Out Over Final Project At Stan State




Girl crashes out over final project at Stan State

No capitals in a headline, unless it's the beginning of the sentence or name of someone/something

300

Comma in a compound sentence goes where?



Before the conjunction (and, but, or... you know the drill).



300

What does © mean?

Copyright. Don’t steal stuff, please.

300

What is a “sic” used for in quotations?


To indicate an error was in the original quote, not a mistake by the writer.



300

Then vs. Than — difference?



Then = time. Than = comparison. 

Easy peasy.



300

Can I use bulleted lists in the Westside Express?

Nope. Use full, beautiful, flowing sentences. 

We’re classy.



400

Commas after intros — yes or no?

YES. Always after intro words, phrases, or clauses. No debates.



400

What is the difference between an abbreviation and an acronym?

Abbreviation= shortened form of a word or a phrase 

Acronym: first letters of each word in a phrase combined to form a pronounceable word

400

Fix this quote:

"I got lost in the school parking lot".

"I got lost in the school parking lot."

Keep your punctuations inside the quotations!!

400

Find the problem: “Your going to love this.”

“Your” should be “You’re.” Fix it before the grammar police show up.

400

 Format this: Marcus Lee, Freshman, Journalism

Marcus Lee (Freshman, Journalism)

500

What’s a comma splice? How do you fix it?

Two full sentences joined by just a comma. Fix with a semicolon, conjunction, or period. 

Boom

500

See whiteboard for example

Means: start a new paragraph

500

Combine your fact checking and quotation skills. What's wrong here?:

"I have a dream", said Harry Styles

1. Fact check: It was Martin Luther King Jr. who actually said this

2. Comma goes inside

500

What’s wrong here: “I saw the car peeking through the window.”

Cars don’t peek. Try: “Peeking through the window, I saw the car.”

500

For the Signal, should you ever say: "Click this link for more information?"

No! Hyperlink to existing phrases or reword!

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