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actually, there is a specific comma rule that pertains to this -
A comma would be used both before and after the designations of "Jr." or "Sr.," as long as the sentence continues. If the designation is at the end of the sentence, then a comma is used only before it.
No, traditionally the suffix Jr is not separated by a comma. It is simply written immediately following the person's last name.
There is no comma before Jr.
Yes, you should use a comma to separate a dependent clause and a verb.
Yes.
a comma (,) is used to separate parts of a sentence and indicates a slight pause when reading/speaking. a semicolon (;) is used to separate main clauses and indicates a longer pause than a comma. A semicolon also separates items in a listing, when one or more of the items contains a comma.
You use a period after it. Here's an example: Martin Luther King Jr.
There is no comma before Jr.
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, a comma is not used to separate a title and a person's name. Instead, a comma is used to separate the title from other information or to separate items in a list. In the case of "Alumnus Scott," no comma is necessary.
to separate sentence
Yes, you should use a comma to separate a dependent clause and a verb.
Yes. Example: Louis Smith, Jr.
The comma is used to separate similar words. 2011 is a number and January is 'text'. Therefore no comma is needed. But you would want to use a comma to separate two numbers. Hence January 11, 2011.
Commas are used to separate the items in a series of three or more things. A comma is also used to separate coordinate adjectives. A comma is also used to set off quoted elements.
The main rule of a comma is to use it to separate the elements in a series of three or more things. You should also use a comma to set off quoted elements and to separate coordinate adjectives.
No comma is necessary before "Jr.", "Sr.", and the like. No comma has ever been necessary before "III", "IV", etc. From the Chicago Manual of Style (http://ow.ly/gcv0):But please note that within text, if you decide to use the more traditional comma before Jr. or Sr., the function of the comma is to set off these abbreviations, so an additional comma is needed after the abbreviation if the sentence continues (as in my first sentence above).
Yes, the Jr and Sr are descriptors that are not part of the name, so would normally be used with a comma, as: Andrew, Jr. or Andrew, Sr.
Yes.