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Wednesday 29 June 2022

Rules of Punctuation ( Ellipsis)

 Ellipsis


(a) When you're quoting material and you want to omit some words. The ellipsis consists of three evenly spaced dots (periods) with spaces between the ellipsis and surrounding letters or other marks. Let's take the sentence, "The ceremony honored twelve brilliant athletes from the Caribbean who were visiting the U.S." and leave out " from the Caribbean who were":

e.g. the ceremony honored twelve brilliant athletes ... visiting the U.S.

If the omission comes after the end of a sentence, the ellipsis will be placed after the period, making a total of four dots. ... See how that works? Notice that there is no space between the period and the last character of the sentence.

(b) The ellipsis can also be used to indicate a pause in the flow of a sentence and is especially useful in quoted speech:

e.g. Juan thought and thought ... and then thought some more. "I'm wondering ... "Juan sid, bemused.

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