C.U.P.S.

Capitalization
c  Sentences begin with a capital letter.
Proper names of people and places are capitalized.
Names of companies / businesses are capitalized.
Days of the week and months of the year are capitalized.
Cities, states, countries, nations, and continents are capitalized.
People and languages of other countries are capitalized.
Names of oceans, lakes, rivers, and other specific geographic locations are capitalized.
Each line of a poem starts with a capital.
Proper adjectives are capitalized.
c  Don’t capitalize seasons.
Capitalize directions only if they name a specific place. (Incorrect: We headed North on highway 91.) (Correct: We live in the Deep South.) / Punctuation
c  Sentences that make a statement end in a period.
c  Sentences that ask a question end in a question mark.
c  Sentences that share a strong feeling end with an exclamation point.
Commas are needed in a series of three or more words / phrases. My friends help me with my math, science, and history homework.
c  A comma separates the city / town from the state. Princeton, West Virginia
c  A comma separates the date and the year. May 20, 2005
Endmarks and commas are always placed inside the quotation marks.
c  An apostrophe is used when letters in a word are left out. I don’t care.
c  An apostrophe shows ownership / possession. Mike’s dog ran away. / Usage
c  Use singular verbs with singular subjects. The cat is purring.
c  Use plural verbs with plural subjects. The cats are purring.
c  Use singular verbs with collective nouns. The team is winning.
c  Keep the tense (present, past, future) of the verb the same throughout the paper.
c  Make sure the pronoun agrees with its antecedent.
c  Use plural verbs with indefinite pronouns that are plural. Many wanted to cast their votes.
c  Use singular verbs with indefinite pronouns that are singular. Each donated his or her time.
c  Make sure a participial phrase is not misplaced. (Incorrect: Running down the hall, the trash can tripped Steve.) (Correct: Running down the hall, Steve tripped over a trash can.)
c  Keep your ideas parallel by using matching grammatical structures. (Incorrect: I went to Maine in the summer, in the fall, and last winter.) (Correct: I went to Maine in the summer, in the fall, and in the winter.) / Spelling
c  Most words follow the i before e rule.
c  Remember these seven exceptions: either, neither, seize, seizure, leisure, height, weird, forfeit
c  The spelling of a word never changes when a prefix is added. Mis + spell = misspell. Un + necessary = unnecessary
c  If the last syllable of the root word is stressed, double the final consonant. Occur = occurring; prefer = preferring; omit = omitting
c  Most nouns that end in f or fe change to ve for the plural form. Knife = knives
c  Most nouns ending in y preceded by a consonant change the y to I and add es to form the plural. Family = families; baby = babies
c  Words that end in y preceded by a vowel become plural by adding an s. Turkey = turkeys. Monkey = monkeys.
c  Avoid the most common spelling errors by learning to use the following words correctly: to, too, two; you’re, your; their, they’re, there; it’s its.
c  Rely on dictionaries, lists of commonly misspelled words, and mechanical devices for help.
Capitalize / Insert / Spelling Error / Run-on Sentence / Sentence Fragment / Delete / Confusing
Add Space / Lower Case Letter / Connect / Start New Paragraph / Add Period / Transpose (switch) words / Indent Paragraph