Could you check if the punctuation is correct? Thank you.

1) Revise last year's summary of the abdridged edition of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. (in italics)
2) Read, translate and do the while-reading and post-reading activities of the following passages:
3) "Robinson and Friday" pp.112-113 from Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. (in italics)
"Beloved Horses, hateful Men" p.117 from J. Swift's Gulliver's Travels (in italics)
"Pamela refuses Mr. B's advances" from Richardson's Pamela.
4) Remedial writing activity: rewrite the answers of your class tests.

1) OK

2) Read, translate and do the activities of the following passages during and after your reading:

3) "Robinson and Friday" on pp.112-113 from Defoe's Robinson Crusoe. (in italics)

"Beloved Horses, hateful Men" on p.117 from J. Swift's Gulliver's Travels (in italics)

"Pamela ... [OK]

4) OK

To check if the punctuation in the given sentences is correct, you can follow these steps:

1) Revise last year's summary of the abridged edition of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (in italics).
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period. The punctuation appears to be correct.

2) Read, translate, and do the while-reading and post-reading activities of the following passages:
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a colon, indicating that a list will follow. The punctuation appears to be correct.

3) "Robinson and Friday," pp.112-113, from Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (in italics).
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a double quotation mark and ends with a comma and a double quotation mark. The punctuation appears to be correct.

"Beloved Horses, hateful Men," p.117, from J. Swift's Gulliver's Travels (in italics).
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a double quotation mark and ends with a comma and a double quotation mark. The punctuation appears to be correct.

"Pamela refuses Mr. B's advances" from Richardson's Pamela.
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a double quotation mark and ends with a double quotation mark. The punctuation appears to be correct.

4) Remedial writing activity: rewrite the answers of your class tests.
- Check if the sentence has an appropriate starting capital letter and ending punctuation mark. In this case, the sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period. The punctuation appears to be correct.

Overall, the provided sentences all seem to have correct punctuation.