QUESTION IMAGE
Question
7 drag the phrase to the rule it demonstrates. choices i read \the outsiders\ for class. the teacher said, please open your book. the short story \the tell - tale heart\ is well known. \please sit down,\ the teacher said. incorrect use of quotation marks correct use of quotation marks incorrect use of quotation marks correct use of quotation marks
To solve this, we analyze each phrase based on quotation mark rules (quotation marks for direct quotes, italics/underlining for titles of works like books/stories):
Phrase 1: "I read 'The Outsiders' for class."
- "The Outsiders" is a book title. Book titles should use italics (or underlining), not single quotation marks. So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 2: "The teacher said, Please open your book."
- "Please open your book" is a direct quote from the teacher. It needs quotation marks (e.g., "The teacher said, 'Please open your book.'"). So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 3: "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known."
- "The Tell - Tale Heart" is a short story title. It should use italics (or underlining), not single quotation marks. So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 4: "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said."
- "Please sit down" is a direct quote, and the quotation marks are used correctly to enclose the direct speech. So this is Correct use of quotation marks.
Now, matching each phrase to the rule:
- "I read 'The Outsiders' for class." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The teacher said, Please open your book." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said." → Correct use of quotation marks
If we were to present the drag - and - drop matches:
- "I read 'The Outsiders' for class." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The teacher said, Please open your book." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said." → Correct use of quotation marks
(Note: For the first and third phrases, book/story titles should use italics, not single quotes; the second phrase is missing quotes around the direct speech; the fourth uses quotes correctly for direct speech.)
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To solve this, we analyze each phrase based on quotation mark rules (quotation marks for direct quotes, italics/underlining for titles of works like books/stories):
Phrase 1: "I read 'The Outsiders' for class."
- "The Outsiders" is a book title. Book titles should use italics (or underlining), not single quotation marks. So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 2: "The teacher said, Please open your book."
- "Please open your book" is a direct quote from the teacher. It needs quotation marks (e.g., "The teacher said, 'Please open your book.'"). So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 3: "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known."
- "The Tell - Tale Heart" is a short story title. It should use italics (or underlining), not single quotation marks. So this is Incorrect use of quotation marks.
Phrase 4: "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said."
- "Please sit down" is a direct quote, and the quotation marks are used correctly to enclose the direct speech. So this is Correct use of quotation marks.
Now, matching each phrase to the rule:
- "I read 'The Outsiders' for class." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The teacher said, Please open your book." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said." → Correct use of quotation marks
If we were to present the drag - and - drop matches:
- "I read 'The Outsiders' for class." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The teacher said, Please open your book." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "The short story 'The Tell - Tale Heart' is well known." → Incorrect use of quotation marks
- "‘Please sit down,’ the teacher said." → Correct use of quotation marks
(Note: For the first and third phrases, book/story titles should use italics, not single quotes; the second phrase is missing quotes around the direct speech; the fourth uses quotes correctly for direct speech.)