ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

ELA 3: Caps Off 137 Views


Share It!


Description:

You read the title. Now take those caps off. They look ridiculous. There, that's better. Now then, today's video is about using capital letters.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

[Coop and Dino singing]

00:13

The day grandma learned to text…

00:16

Ah, what a day it was. [Person checking phone and reads text from Grandma]

00:18

She sent you 12 emojis of turkeys, your own last name, a message that said, "text text

00:23

how does this work" and then…

00:24

The dreaded all caps message. [Grandma text message in all caps]

00:27

Yup.

00:28

Somehow, grandma dearest managed to get stuck in all caps land.

00:31

Which made this poorly punctuated message even more terrifying.

00:35

Let this be a lesson: always use commas. [Arrow points to commas in Grandmas text message]

00:38

Anyway.

00:38

Capital letters aren't just for terrifying virtual yelling...

00:41

They serve a variety of more normal and everyday functions – particularly when it comes to [Coop teaching about capitalization]

00:46

proper nouns.

00:47

And in order to really understand the use of capital letters, we better know what proper

00:50

nouns are.

00:51

Luckily for us, it's pretty easy!

00:53

Easier than getting granny to text, at least…

00:55

Proper nouns are people, places, and things that are very specifically named. [Dino talking about proper nouns]

00:59

In other words, pretty much anything that's properly named is a proper noun.

01:03

This includes....

01:04

Books.

01:05

Documents.

01:05

Names of places.

01:07

Or groups of people, schools, or even countries. [Pin board with maps and photos of holiday locations]

01:09

It even includes days of the week!

01:11

A few examples include, Huckleberry Finn, the Rainforest, ABBA, U.C.

01:16

Berkeley, South Korea, and Tuesday.

01:19

They all have very specific names, so they all need to start with a capital letter.

01:23

If something is just a generic noun, like “bunny” then we wouldn't capitalize it, [Bunny hops across a field]

01:27

because that's not a proper and specific name.

01:29

But the word “bunny” in Bugs Bunny certainly is capitalized, because that's his proper name. [Bugs Bunny appears behind a bush]

01:34

Seriously, check his drivers license!

01:36

Also, who gave that bunny a drivers license…? [A smashed car and a police vehicle as Bugs Bunny appears behind the car]

01:38

That can't be safe…

01:40

We also capitalize people's official titles when they appear before their name.

01:44

If Bugs was a doctor, for instance, then we'd capitalize that, too, like so….

01:48

Doctor Bugs Bunny.

01:49

But if our sentence was simply, “Bugs Bunny is a doctor.”

01:52

then we wouldn't capitalize it, since it's just the generic word and not part of his name. [Girl sitting in a room and Doctor Bugs Bunny appears]

01:56

Got it?

01:57

Good.

01:58

Whether it's the title of a book, movie, person, place, school, country – or anything else,

02:02

if it's a proper title specific to that very specific thing, it gets capitalized. [Dino giving examples of capitalization]

02:06

But just remember – when we say capitalized, we only mean the first letter of each word.

02:10

Don't capitalize the whole thing…

02:12

Unless you want to yell back at granny, "PLEASE, OH PLEASE DON'T EAT ME!!! [Person sends text message to Grandma]

02:16

I'LL DO THE DISHES FOR A YEAR!!!"

02:18

Though that might just confuse your poor granny who just wants to share a nice turkey dinner

02:21

with you… [Girl and Granny sitting at the table for dinner]

Up Next

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 1
14043 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?

Related Videos

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1
405 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3
90 Views

ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?

Science 3: Sedimentary Rocks and Ancient Buildings
115 Views

We wanted to make a video about sedentary rocks, but we couldn't get lazy uncle Rocky off the couch. Oh well. We'll teach you about sedimentary roc...

Science 3: How Living Things Become Fossils
137 Views

Today we're bringing you the opposite of Jurassic Park—how living things become fossils. Okay okay, it might not be quite as fun...but hey, at le...