The Essential 99 Punctuation Rules for Court Reporters: Student Edition


Book Description

An Inexpensive Solution: Unfortunately, many court reporting students cannot afford Morson's English Guide (LMEG), Bad Grammar / Good Punctuation (BGGP), or The Gregg Reference Manual (GRM). The 99 Punctuation Rules is meant as an inexpensive solution until the court reporting student can purchase one or more of these references. 80/20 Principle: The 80/20 principle states that about 80 percent of the results come from 20 percent of the causes. Therefore, roughly 80 percent of punctuation usage comes from 20 percent of the punctuation rules. The 99 Punctuation Rules focuses on the 20 percent or the most commonly used punctuation rules. Grammar: There is an initial focus on understanding grammar. You don't need to be a grammarian, but you can't punctuate well without knowing the basics of grammar and sentence structure. References: The rules in the 99 Punctuation Rules are not my rules. They are the rules in the most current edition of LMEG, BGGP, and GRM. Other references were consulted when the LMEG, BGGP, and/or GRM did not agree. Differences in the references are highlighted.




The Essential 99 Punctuation Rules for Court Reporters


Book Description

An Inexpensive Solution: Unfortunately, many court reporting students cannot afford Morson's English Guide (LMEG), Bad Grammar / Good Punctuation (BGGP), or The Gregg Reference Manual (GRM). The 99 Punctuation Rules is meant as an inexpensive solution until the court reporting student can purchase one or more of these references. 80/20 Principle: The 80/20 principle states that about 80 percent of the results come from 20 percent of the causes. Therefore, roughly 80 percent of punctuation usage comes from 20 percent of the punctuation rules. The 99 Punctuation Rules focuses on the 20 percent or the most commonly used punctuation rules. Grammar: There is an initial focus on understanding grammar. You don't need to be a grammarian, but you can't punctuate well without knowing the basics of grammar and sentence structure. References: The rules in the 99 Punctuation Rules are not my rules. They are the rules in the most current edition of LMEG, BGGP, and GRM. Other references were consulted when the LMEG, BGGP, and/or GRM did not agree. Unlike the "Student Edition" of this book, the differences in the references are cited, discussed, and compared with additional references like The Chicago Manual of Style. Therefore, this work is subtitled "Reference Edition."




The Essential 99 Punctuation Rules for Court Reporters: Workbook


Book Description

This workbook contains punctuation practice exercises for The Essential 99 Punctuation Rules For Court Reporters (Student Edition, Reference Edition, or video series). It is probably not possible for a student to master punctuation by simply reading a textbook. Practice is necessary. The student's goal should be to learn the punctuation rules in the textbook and then to practice the rules in the workbook. This way the rules become ingrained. These exercises were developed and arranged to follow the progression of The Essential 99 Punctuation Rules For Court Reporters. There are 375 exercises that are punctuation specific (comma, semicolon, colon, etc.) and focus on one or more of the textbook rules. There are 125 "general" exercises that randomly cover all the textbook punctuation rules.




Wick's Punctuation Rules for Court Reporters


Book Description

The grading guidelines for the National Court Reporters Association state: "The RSR, RPR and RMR skills tests are developed based on the rules of punctuation set forth in The Gregg Reference Manual and Merriam Webster's Dictionary." A Facebook poll showed 86 percent of court reporters use either Morson's English Guide for Court Reporters (Morson) or Court Reporting: Bad Grammar / Good Punctuation (Wells). Only 9 percent of court reporters use The Gregg Reference Manual (Gregg). The low Gregg usage is probably the result of its focus: English composition. Morson and Wells focus on punctuating court reporting transcripts. Unfortunately, Gregg, Morson, and Wells have not been updated in more than 10 years. Morson was last published in 1997, Gregg in 2011, and Wells in 2011. The punctuation and style rules in Wick's Punctuation Rules for Court Reporters are based on the most recent style guides: The Gregg Reference Manual (11th Edition, 2011) The Chicago Manual of Style (17th Edition, 2017) The Redbook: A Manual on Legal Style (4th Edition, 2018) The Associated Press Stylebook (56th Edition, 2022-2024) Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary for spelling.




Court Reporting


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Punctuation for Court Reporters


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The Gregg Reference Manual


Book Description

The Gregg Reference Manual 9e by William Sabin is intended for anyone who writes, edits, or prepares material for distribution or publication. For nearly fifty years, this manual has been recognized as the best style manual for business professionals and for students who want to master the on-the-job standards of business professionals. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.




How to Say it and Write it Correctly Now: The Ultimate Reference Book, Containing Practical Grammar, Punctuation, & Spelling Rules, Homonyms, Medical Terms, Layperson's Legal Dictionary, Major Art Terms -- And More!


Book Description

Offers a reference guide designed to help readers become confident English speakers and writers.