What is a colon in writing and why does my professor love it?

Frederic

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Feb 19, 2026
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Hey everyone! 😊

I'm a freshman this year, and I'm genuinely trying to figure out the "rules of the game" for college writing. I got my first paper back yesterday, and my professor wrote "great use of the colon!" in the margin next to a sentence where I was just listing things. The thing is, I didn't even realize I was using one correctly. It got me thinking—what is a colon in writing really all about? Is it just a formal way to say "here comes a list," or does it have deeper functions?

I want to start using them on purpose, not just by accident. I see them in academic articles all the time, but when I try to copy the style, it feels forced. Maybe there's a trick to making it flow naturally? I'd love to hear how you all figured this out. Are there specific places where a colon just works better than a comma or a period? My goal is to make my essays look more sophisticated, and I feel like mastering this little punctuation mark might be the secret handshake I've been missing. Any advice from the grammar pros out there?
 
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The rule: A colon must be preceded by a complete sentence. What comes after can be a list, a phrase, or even another complete sentence (though some style guides prefer capitalizing that second sentence).

Examples:
  • Correct: "She brought three things: a book, a pen, and a notebook." (Complete sentence before colon)
  • Incorrect: "She brought: a book, a pen, and a notebook." (Incomplete sentence before colon—this is a common mistake!)
Why professors love them: Colons show you understand how to create emphasis and structure information hierarchically. They're not just punctuation—they're a thinking tool.
 
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