We went to Florida I saw my grandma.
Run-On
Correct this run-on: "I went to the store I bought some apples"
I went to the store, and I bought some apples.
This punctuation mark comes after asking a question.
Question mark
Correct this sentence: "i went to the park."
I went to the park.
Add punctuation: "He said Lets go to the store"
He said, "Let's go to the store."
The books are on the table.
Complete sentence
Correct this run-on: She loves to read books she reads every night."
She loves to read books. She reads every night.
This punctuation mark is used to show excitement or strong emotion.
Exclamation mark
Fix this sentence: "The cat slept the dog barked."
The cat slept, and the dog barked."
Where does the comma go? "I love you said Anna"
"I love you," said Anna.
Karen was playing loud music it woke the neighbors up.
Run-on
Correct the run-on: "The dog barked loudly it woke up the whole neighborhood."
The dog barked loudly, and it woke up the whole neighborhood.
This punctuation mark is used to separate items in a list.
Comma
Correct this sentence: "he ran fast he won the race."
He ran fast, so he won the race.
Add quotation marks: Anna said lets play outside.
Anna said, "Let's play outside."
The dog ate his food then took a nap.
Correct the run-on: "They played in the park they had a great time."
They played in the park, and they had a great time.
This punctuation mark is used to show possession.
Apostrophe
Correct the sentence: "After lunch they played in the park they had fun."
"After lunch, they played in the park and had fun."
Punctuate this: "Watch out!" yelled Tom, "There's a car coming!"
"Watch out!" yelled Tom. "There's a car coming!"
Run-on
Correct this run-on: "I finished my homework I watched TV."
"I finished my homework, and then I watched tv."
This punctuation mark is used to join two independent clauses.
Semicolon
She sings beautifully because she practices every day.
Where do the punctuation marks go? "Do you want to go" asked Sam.
"Do you want to go?" asked Sam.