NO. You replace the comma with "of"... For instance, July of 2009
The comma goes between the day and the month and between the number and the year: Wednesday, June 5, 2012.
June 9, 2009
You really need a comma after the day of the month - January 8, 1947.
No. It is not necessary to place a comma between a season and the year, or even between a month and the year. An example is the following sentence:In Spring 2015 we noticed unusually high rainfall compared to the norm.
No, you shouldn't. You also don't use a comma if you have just the month and year with no day, e.g., June 2016. whitesmoke.com/uses-of-commas
No unless it's structurally necessary such as at the end of a preposition. When writing the date using numbers for the day and year, a comma is inserted between the two.
yes
Use commas to separate items in a list of three or more.Use commas to separate independent clauses when they are joined by conjunctions.Use a comma to separate a dependent clause from an independent clause.Use a comma to separate any word or phrase from the rest of the sentence that is not essential to the sentence's meaning, or that provides extra information about the subject.Use a comma to separate quotations from the rest of the sentence. (trailing commas appear inside quotation marks)Use a comma to separate an introductory element from the rest of the sentence.Use a comma to separate the names of a city from the name of a state.Use a comma to separate the day of the week, from the day of the month, and the year.
No, you don't put it after the year, but you put it after the date.
Usually, yes: e.g. 1st January, 2010.
Yes, there is usually a comma. If you choose not to use a comma then you should remain consistent. For example, if you're writing an academic paper and using lots of dates then they should either all have commas or they should all have no commas.
no. that sentence is punctuated correctly.