Test 8.3
Advantages of Playing Football
Read the passage and choose the correct answers for the blanks.
Read the passage and choose the correct answers for the blanks.
Read the passage and choose the correct answers for the blanks.
Choose the correct answer
An exclamation mark (!) is a punctuation mark used to show strong feelings, emphasis, or sudden expressions in writing. It adds emotion, excitement, surprise, or urgency to a sentence. Unlike a period (.), which ends a neutral sentence, the exclamation mark makes the sentence more expressive and lively. 😊
Exclamation marks are used when a sentence shows happiness, anger, surprise, fear, or excitement.
When giving a command, warning, or instruction, exclamation marks make it more forceful.
Exclamation marks are used with interjections, which are short words expressing emotion or reaction.
Sometimes, exclamation marks emphasize a point, making it stronger or dramatic.
A comma (,) is a punctuation mark used to show a short pause in a sentence. Commas help make writing clearer, organized, and easier to read. They separate ideas, list items, and prevent confusion. 😊
Commas are used to separate three or more words, phrases, or items in a sentence.
Commas are often used before conjunctions to join two independent clauses.
Use a comma after introductory words, phrases, or clauses at the start of a sentence.
Commas are used to set off extra information that is not essential to the main meaning.
Commas are used before or after direct speech to separate it from the rest of the sentence.
Commas help organize dates, addresses, and large numbers.
Inverted commas, also known as quotation marks (“ ”), are punctuation marks used to show exact words spoken, quotations, titles, or to highlight special words. They help make writing clearer and more expressive. 😊
An apostrophe ( ’ ) is used to show possession, meaning that something belongs to someone or something. This is one of the most important uses of the apostrophe in English. When we add an apostrophe, we show who owns or possesses something. 😊
For most singular nouns, we add ’s to show ownership.
If the noun is plural and already ends with s, we add only an apostrophe ( ’ ) after the s.
If the plural noun does not end in s, we add ’s.
For names ending in s, both forms are acceptable, but the most common is ’s.
We can also show possession with things, places, or groups.