not in all cases.
no
The comma goes after the name. Hello John,
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).
Return to sender does not require quotation marks or a comma.
The comma goes after the business between the name and the LLC. Business Company, LLC
A comma is typically used before a conjunction (e.g., and, but, or) when joining two independent clauses. However, a comma is not generally used before a preposition, unless it is necessary for clarity or emphasis.
someone else asked, too. no.
You typically place a comma before a conjunction when it separates two independent clauses. If the conjunction connects two words or phrases, a comma is not necessary.
Yes, if it joins two independent clauses, or joins items in a list. If it does not, then it is not always needed. For instance, "I like apples and oranges." The and (a conjunction), does not need a comma before it in this case.
In American English, a comma is placed before a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS - for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) when it is connecting two independent clauses. However, in British English, the comma is usually omitted before the conjunction.
You don't put a comma in a coordinating conjunction, the comma goes before a coordinating conjunction. Coordinating conjunctions are used to connect two or more independent clauses.Sally was late to work today, and her boss fired her.
No, you don't use or put a comma before 'but' instead place it after it (but). Why? Simply because the word 'but' itself' acts as a comma, you pause when you get there. Never stop or pause the sentence until you get to the word itself as it acts out as a comma, even though there are some times where you can get a comma after it.
Only proper nouns and I are capitalized after a comma. But is a conjunction, so no, it doesn't need to be capitalized.
Yes, a comma is generally needed when a subordinate clause begins with a subordinate conjunction. The comma is used to separate the subordinate clause from the main clause.
Generally a comma does not go immediately before or after a conjunction, which is a joining of ideas. You may put a comma before one if it introduces an independent clause, especially if there would normally be a pause in speech. For example: We arrived after midnight, and by then the party had been over for an hour.
A comma is placed before and (and all other coördinating conjunctions) when the conjunction is being used to combine two independent clauses. In the sentence "My name is Joey, and I am thirteen years old," a comma precedes the conjunction and to hold the two clauses together.
No, a comma is not a conjunction. A comma is a punctuation mark used to separate elements in a sentence, whereas a conjunction is a word that connects words, phrases, or clauses.