ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Semicolons Videos 1 videos

Semicolons
10246 Views

Want even more deets on semicolons? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

See All

Semicolons 10246 Views


Share It!

Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

">

Description:

Want even more deets on semicolons? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

Semicolons, a la Shmoop. Your best friend Lila loves Disney movies.

00:10

Her favorite is Beauty and the Beast; she loves the part where Gaston falls off the

00:14

castle. Okay, she's a little grim.

00:16

While it's perfectly okay for you to mention Lila's favorite Disney movie, and the reason

00:20

why she loves the film, in two separate sentences...

00:24

...feel free to bust out the semicolon here instead.

00:26

Believe it or not, the semicolon doesn't exist just so you can text a winking emoticon.

00:31

Nope... this punctuation mark serves to splice two shorter sentences that are closely related

00:38

to each other... together. Say you have a paragraph of short sentences.

00:43

"Mary hated her shoes. They were too small. They were also ugly. Her mom had bought them on sale."

00:49

Too many choppy sentences can be boring for the reader. The semicolon allows you to spice

00:56

up your sentence structure, so you end up with...

00:58

..."Mary hated her shoes. They were too small -- semicolon -- they were also ugly.

01:04

Her mom had bought them on sale."

01:06

Your reader is less bored. Yay! Now make them clown shoes and you're really in business...

01:14

You also use a semicolon when you want to point out the relationship between two clauses.

01:18

Take these two sentences: "Jane's pants were too short" and "Everyone could see

01:24

her hairy ankles."

01:26

There's a clear relationship between these two sentences. So why not string them together

01:30

with a semicolon?

01:31

Then you end up with, "Jane's pants were too short -- semicolon -- everyone could

01:36

see her hairy ankles." You never use semicolons with coordinating

01:40

conjunctions like "and", "or", and "but"...

01:43

...with one exception.

01:44

For example, say you have the sentence, "Sara has a shrine to Twilight in her room, but

01:49

she hides it from her friends."

01:51

Here, the punctuation mark between "Twilight" and "but" needs to be a comma.

01:56

Now for the exception. Say your sentence is, "Lots of girls have Twilight shrines, including

02:02

Sara in Muleshoe, Texas -- semicolon -- Leslie in Stop, Arkansas -- semicolon -- and Linda

02:09

in Hellhole Palms, California."

02:12

Because you're listing girls with Twilight shrines in this sentence...

02:16

...and because commas are already being used to separate cities from states...

02:20

...semicolons are needed to separate each girl in the list from the others.

02:25

One instance where you always use a semicolon is when a conjunctive adverb is in play.

02:31

Conjunctive adverbs include words like "however", "therefore", and "indeed".

02:39

Say you have two sentences: "I put off writing my paper all week"...

02:42

...and, "Therefore, I will be pulling an all-nighter."

02:46

If you want to combine these two sentences into one, you'd insert a semicolon between

02:50

"week" and "therefore", and end up with...

02:53

..."I put off writing my paper all week -- semicolon -- therefore, I will be pulling

02:57

an all-nighter." If you're having trouble remembering that

03:00

coordinating conjunctions require commas...

03:03

...and conjunctive adverbs need semicolons...

03:05

...try this trick. Coordinating conjunctions are small words like "and", "or",

03:10

and "but"...

03:11

...and they need small commas.

03:15

Conjunctive adverbs are bigger words like "however", "therefore", and "indeed"...

03:20

...and they need the bigger semicolon. Anyway... we know Lila's your bestie and

03:26

all, but...might we recommend you get some new friends?

Related Videos

What is a Primary Source?
43696 Views

This video defines a primary source and what makes it different from a secondary source. What counts as original material? And where can we find th...

Affect vs. Effect
10818 Views

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...

Question Marks
3733 Views

Want even more deets on Question Marks? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Long vs. Short Sentences
2885 Views

Want even more deets on grammar? Click here for all the goods.

Your vs. You're
4158 Views

Want even more deets on Your vs. You're? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.