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ELA 3: You Don't Say: Dialogue and Quotation Marks 364 Views


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Description:

This may shock you, but quotation marks are used to...mark quotations. Mind blown, right? Today's video will teach us about them and how to format dialogue.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:05

[Dino and Coop singing]

00:13

Think about all the conversations you have in a day... [Group of people talking]

00:16

You talk with your mom...

00:17

Your teacher...

00:19

Maybe even your baby sister.... though does that really count as a conversation….? [Girl talking to a baby looking confused]

00:25

Okay, now that you have all of those conversations rattling around your brain, try and imagine [Different people spinning round the girls head]

00:30

which ones would be entertaining to read as dialogue in a story...

00:34

…probably not many, right? [The story explodes to reveal the baby sister]

00:36

But that doesn't mean you're a boring person!

00:39

It just means that most conversations aren't really important enough to share in a story. [Coop pointing at a blackboard]

00:44

And that's why today's topic is how to use dialogue! [Spaceship flies past]

00:47

See, not only is day-to-day conversation kind of boring, but it's usually chock full of [Schoolkids talking at the lockers]

00:53

filler words...

00:54

Y'know, like…."Hmm, umm, like, ahhh, and well."

00:58

If you include any of those in a story, that'd be one long, kind of boring story… [The story explodes leaving the word boring]

01:04

That's why we always want our dialogue to be to the point.

01:06

It should be shorter than normal conversation, with no filler words.

01:10

And unlike boring conversations about tooth-brushing and homework, dialogue in stories should be [School kids talking sat on the grass]

01:14

included to either set a scene, or make something happen.

01:17

Since stories are all about, well, the story, then your dialogue should be all about the [Pages turning in a book]

01:21

story, too.

01:22

On a more technical note, the spoken words should always appear within quotations, including

01:27

any punctuation – like this.

01:29

Oh, and don't forget to add the dialogue tags.

01:32

Y'know, like “he said” or “she said,” so that people know exactly which character [Dialogue tags appearing]

01:35

is saying what.

01:36

And any sentence that normally ends with a period instead gets a comma, followed by a

01:40

quotation mark, and then the dialogue tag.

01:43

Like this. [Example is shown]

01:44

So now that we've covered our bases, let's look at two examples and identify which one is [Baseball player is kicked off a base]

01:49

worth keeping... and which one should probably get deleted immediately. [Example 2 folder is chosen]

01:53

First up to bat... [An apple is hit with a baseball bat and explodes]

01:54

“We only have ten minutes left until the black hole closes,” yelled Samantha.

01:59

“If we don't fly our space ship into it soon, we'll be trapped on this alien planet forever!” [Sentence being typed out]

02:04

Geesh, we hope Samantha gets out of that alright… [Spaceship flying towards a blackhole]

02:06

sounds kind of terrifying.

02:08

While Samantha deals with that, let's check out our second example:

02:11

“So, like, what do you want to do today?” asked Marcus.

02:15

“Hmm. I dunno, really.

02:16

Whatever you want?

02:18

Ahhh….yeah, I don't care.

02:19

Uhhh…hm.”

02:22

So, which one do you think is best?

02:24

If you guessed the first one, you'd be right. [Example 2 folder is set on fire]

02:26

That's because it's to the point, moves the story forwards, doesn't contain any filler words,

02:30

and is interesting to read.

02:31

The other passage?

02:32

Well, it pretty much fails all of those tests. [Fail stamp]

02:34

Oh, and before we move on, let's help Samantha get out of that mess… [A hand stretches the black hole out so the spaceship can go through]

02:39

Phew.

02:40

Close one.

02:41

And just in time, too, because that's it!

02:42

No more tips!

02:43

But as long as you keep in mind what we covered, writing dialogue will be a snap! [Someone snaps a twig]

02:48

And yes, you technically could make everyone speak like your baby sister, but we're pretty

02:52

sure a book called, "Mmmgaah Maah Maah Maah!!!" won't sell very well… [Baby in a cot next to the book]

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