Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Capitalization After Colons



Have you run across the situation where one sentence ending with a colon is followed by another sentence? Do you capitalize the first word of that second sentence? Why would you use a colon between the two sentences rather than a period or a semicolon?

Rule for colons between sentences: Use a colon instead of a semicolon or a period between two sentences when the second sentence explains or illustrates something in the first sentence.

Capitalization rule with sentences after colons: If only one sentence follows the colon, do not capitalize the first word of the new sentence. If two or more sentences follow the colon, capitalize the first word of each sentence following.

Example: One of my favorite novels is by Kurt Vonnegut: his novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, is often funny, yet packs an emotional punch.

Example: Garlic is used generously in Italian dishes: It greatly enhances the flavor of pasta. Garlic also enhances the flavor of lasagna, one of my favorite dishes.

Now, should you capitalize the first word after a colon if it begins a list rather than a new sentence?

Rule for capitalizing with lists after colons: Do not capitalize the first word of a list after a colon.

Example: I like the following Italian dishes: pasta primavera, eggplant Parmesan, and lasagna. (Parmesan is capitalized because it comes from the Italian city of Parma.)



Source: Grammarbook


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5 comments:

  1. Nice reminders, Crystal! Am tweeting. :) Hope you're doing well!

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  2. Hello there Crystal!! Thank you for this tutorial. I do have huge problems with my commas, semi-colons, colons, etc and this post clarifies so much! Thank you!! Take care and happy Wednesday!! x

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  3. Great reminder about the colons and when to capitalize. Hope all is well.

    Mason
    Thoughts in Progress

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  4. Elizabeth, Old Kitty and Mason: I'm happy you found this helpful! And thanks, Elizabeth, for the tweet!

    I appreciate you stopping by, especially considering my erratic schedule! I'm doing well...very busy with editing! (Yay!) I hope things are going well with you as well!

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  5. This was really helpful! You know is social science, we totally us colons wrong in titles--I see (and write) titles all the time that what comes after the colon is only a phrase, and not a complete sentence.

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