Punctuation
Punctuation marks give written language its rhythm and clarity — they show where to pause, stop, ask, exclaim, and how words relate to each other.
A. End Marks
Marks that end a sentence
Every sentence must end with one of three marks. The choice of mark changes how the sentence is read and what emotion it conveys.
Close the door.
Did he pass the exam?
Alas! He has failed.
B. Comma
The Comma ( , )
The most frequently used — and most frequently misused — punctuation mark
A comma indicates a short pause within a sentence. It separates elements to prevent confusion and improve readability.
She was tired, so she went to bed.
After the rain, the roads were wet.
Come here, children.
He lives in Karachi, Pakistan.
He replied, "I am fine."
C. Colon & Semicolon
Two powerful mid-sentence marks
· A list — She needs three things: patience, hard work, and dedication.
· An explanation — There is one reason he failed: he never studied.
· A quotation — The teacher said: "Never give up."
· Join related sentences — She studied hard; she passed easily.
· Separate complex list items that contain commas — He visited Karachi, Sindh; Lahore, Punjab; and Peshawar, KPK.
D. Apostrophe
The Apostrophe ( ' )
The apostrophe has two main uses: showing possession and forming contractions.
it's = contraction of "it is" or "it has"
It's raining. (= It is raining)
E. Quotation Marks
Quotation Marks ( " " )
Quotation marks enclose the exact words spoken or written by someone — they show that the words inside are not the writer's own.
· Tag after quote → comma/full stop inside closing quote
· Question/exclamation → mark goes inside
"Are you ready?" he asked.
· Words used as words — defining or discussing them
· Terms used ironically or with special meaning
The word "sincere" means genuine.
After: "Come in," he said.
Middle: "Come in," he said, "and sit down."
F. Other Marks
Additional punctuation marks
· Compound nouns: mother-in-law, post-office
· Numbers: twenty-one, forty-five
· Sudden break or interruption in speech
· Adding extra information mid-sentence
· Dates and references: Quaid-e-Azam (1876–1948)
· Abbreviations being introduced: Pakistan Television Corporation (PTC)
· Trailing thought or hesitation in speech
· Suspension of action in narrative writing
· Fractions: ½ · ¾
· Dates: 14/8/1947
· Emphasis or annotation in informal contexts
· Used in dictionary/grammar to mark incorrect usage
Practice — Place the Punctuation
A sentence is shown with a blank. Pick the correct punctuation mark from the options below.
Quick Revision
| Mark | Symbol | Primary Use |
|---|---|---|
| Full Stop | . | Ends a declarative or imperative sentence |
| Question Mark | ? | Ends a direct question |
| Exclamation Mark | ! | Ends an exclamatory sentence or follows an interjection |
| Comma | , | Separates items in a list, clauses, introductory phrases |
| Colon | : | Introduces a list, explanation, or quotation |
| Semicolon | ; | Joins two related independent clauses |
| Apostrophe | ' | Shows possession or marks a contraction |
| Quotation Marks | " " | Encloses direct speech or titles of short works |
| Hyphen | - | Forms compound words or modifiers |
| Dash | — | Creates emphasis or marks an abrupt break |
| Parentheses | ( ) | Encloses extra, non-essential information |
| Ellipsis | … | Shows omission or a trailing thought |