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This video explains the difference between affect and effect and provide tips for remembering which is which and when to use each one. If you suffe...
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Ellipses 1951 Views
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Want even more deets on ellipses? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.
Transcript
- 00:01
Ellipses, a la Shmoop. Sometimes, when we’re thinking about something
- 00:07
really deep or difficult, like nuclear physics or world hunger or the final episode of The
- 00:12
Sopranos…
- 00:14
…our minds just need a break. A time-out. A brief pause. And how do we signal that the
- 00:21
brain train has jumped the tracks, if only for a few moments?
Full Transcript
- 00:25
With an ellipsis <<uh-LIP-sis>>…
- 00:26
…otherwise known as… dot dot dot. The ellipsis serves two purposes. It can indicate
- 00:32
that a writer has hit the “Pause” button on his or her thought process…
- 00:36
…or an ellipsis may mean that words have been omitted from a piece of text.
- 00:41
Before we dive into the Sea of Examples, however, let’s look at the formatting rules for this
- 00:45
particular punctuation mark. We can’t just throw dots on a page and call
- 00:49
the result an ellipsis. Nope.
- 00:51
That’d be like Julia Child tossing stiffly beaten egg whites into a bowl and calling
- 00:55
them a soufflé.
- 01:02
An ellipsis, to be an ellipsis, must possess the following: Three dots. Not two. Not four.
- 01:08
Three.
- 01:09
There must be a space between each dot and a space before and after the ellipsis. So,
- 01:14
when we type an ellipsis, what we’re really typing is…
- 01:19
…space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space.
- 01:22
Also, make sure that the ellipsis, when typed out, stays on one line and doesn’t spread
- 01:29
to two. Now, how does this punctuation mark work when
- 01:32
we’re using it to omit words?
- 01:34
Say the high school football coach provided one hundred words to the school newspaper
- 01:37
about Friday night’s disaster of a game.
- 01:40
We have to chisel Coach’s one-hundred-word ramble down to a usable quote. This is where
- 01:45
the ellipsis comes in handy…
- 01:46
“Well, the truth is space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space we didn’t completely suck, although we kind
- 01:52
of did.”
- 01:53
See? One hundred words cut down to thirteen. That’s the power of the ellipsis.
- 01:58
Or what if our English teacher wants to read aloud a five-hundred page essay on why Twilight
- 02:02
is the worst book ever written? Can’t we trim that down a little?
- 02:06
“Twilight is space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space God-awful space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space
- 02:13
and should be burned.”
- 02:14
Once again, the ellipsis does amazing things. We went from tens of thousands of words to
- 02:19
eight. If the section of text we want to omit follows
- 02:23
a complete sentence, we plunk down a period at the end of the sentence…
- 02:26
…and then follow it with space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space.
- 02:30
Yes, there are four dots in a row. No, this is not a four-dot ellipsis. It’s just a
- 02:36
period, followed by an ellipsis, and there happen to be four dots total.
- 02:40
If the section of text we want to omit ends with a terminal punctuation mark, like an
- 02:45
exclamation point or a period or a question mark, we do the following…
- 02:53
…space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space-terminal punctuation mark.
- 02:55
For example, if we have the sentence, “Did Billy Bob take the train from Topeka that
- 03:00
arrived late?”…
- 03:01
…and we want to snip out the words “that arrived late”…
- 03:04
…our sentence would then read, “Did Billy Bob take the train from Topeka space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space-question
- 03:08
mark.” Finally, there’s one enormous caveat to
- 03:12
be aware of when it comes to using the omission ellipsis…
- 03:15
…be careful what gets cut. Trimming away unnecessary words to shorten a quote is one
- 03:20
thing…
- 03:20
…and trimming away words that change the meaning of the quote altogether is another.
- 03:28
Down that path lies trouble and possible legal action.
- 03:31
As mentioned earlier, the ellipsis can also be used to indicate a pause in a train of
- 03:35
thought.
- 03:36
Maybe the writer wants to show that time has passed.
- 03:38
“Wayne thought about going for a run space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space but, five hours later, he was still on the
- 03:45
sofa, watching Honey Boo-Boo.”
- 03:47
Maybe the writer wants to show that a list is unfinished.
- 03:50
“Leslie contemplated the ingredients she needed for the cake: flour, sugar, chocolate,
- 03:55
space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space” Or perhaps the writer has simply run out of
- 03:58
dialogue.
- 03:59
“Dude,” Jack said, “it’s like, you know, space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space”
- 04:04
“Yeah, man,” Bill replied. “Yeah, I feel you space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space”
- 04:08
While it’s grammatically correct to use an ellipsis to show a break in a train of
- 04:12
thought, many readers find the practice annoying…
- 04:14
…like, really, really, really annoying. So, keep the mental break ellipses to a minimum.
- 04:20
And that’s it for the dot dot dot. Not only does it help us shorten sentences…
- 04:23
…but it can indicate when we’ve contemplated enough pre-calc for one day space-dot-space-dot-space-dot-space
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