Contents:
Indicating omissions
Indicating a pause or hesitation
Ellipses are three equally spaced dots. Ellipses usually indicate that something has been omitted from a quoted passage, but they can also signal a pause or hesitation in speech in the same way that a dash can.
Indicating omissions
Just as you should carefully use quotation marks around any material that you quote directly from a source, so you should carefully use ellipses to indicate that you have left out part of a quotation that otherwise appears to be a complete sentence.
The ellipses in the following example indicate two omissions—one in the middle of the sentence and one at the end. When you omit the last part of a quoted sentence, add a period before the ellipses, for a total of four dots. Be sure a complete sentence comes before and after the four points. If you are adding your own ellipses to a quotation that already has other ellipses, enclose yours in brackets.
ORIGINAL TEXT
The quasi-official division of the population into three economic classes called high-, middle-, and low-income groups rather misses the point, because as a class indicator the amount of money is not as important as the source.
—PAUL FUSSELL, “Notes on Class”
WITH ELLIPSES
As Paul Fussell argues, “The quasi-official division of the population into three economic classes . . . rather misses the point. . . .”
If your shortened quotation ends with a source (such as a page number, a name, or a title), follow these steps:
Packer then argues, “The Administration is right to reconsider its strategy . . .” (34).
Indicating a pause or hesitation
Ellipses are becoming more common in informal communication, where many writers prefer them to a period at the end of a sentence.
Let me know where you want to meet tonight. . . .