The most common name suffixes are senior and junior, limited chiefly to American usage, which may be written with a capital first letter (Sr.) or in lower case (jr.) following the person's name (with or without an interceding comma).
The abbreviation "Sr." is typically followed by a period. It can be used after a man's name to indicate that he is the son of a man who has the same name. For example, John Smith Sr. would indicate that he is the father, and John Smith Jr. would indicate that he is the son.
I need to punctuate this paragraph before submitting it to my teacher for review.
It should be punctuated the same way you punctuate other quotations.
She asked her friend to punctuate her essay before submitting it for grading.
"No, thank you."
The root word of "punctuate" is "punctus," which comes from Latin and means "point" or "dot."
Apostrophe
I will punctuate this sentence.
I need to punctuate this paragraph before submitting it to my teacher for review.
No it is not a rule. You should punctuate as normal.
Q: "How do you punctuate this sentence? "i see a horse do you" A: I see a horse, do you? That is how you correct it, or punctuate.
It should be punctuated the same way you punctuate other quotations.
She asked her friend to punctuate her essay before submitting it for grading.
Synonyms for the verb punctuate are emphasize, accentuate, interrupt, intersperse, or occur at intervals.
Opponent's can be punctuated with an apostrophe to show possession (e.g., opponent's strategy) or as a contraction (e.g., opponent's playing).
this : that :: these : those.
You must punctuate every sentence. You will learn to correctly punctuate sentences when you learn the types of sentences.
You must punctuate every sentence. You will learn to correctly punctuate sentences when you learn the types of sentences.