It depends on the legal name of the company. You need to see how the name of the entity is filed with the secretary of state in which the entity is created. The legal name is also filed on the IRS form 8832 Entity Classification Election. It is the legal name of the entity, not grammar or usage. Most LLC names I have seen do not have a comma before them.
Yes, you should use a comma before "Jr." when writing a person's name to separate the person's last name from the suffix. For example, "John Smith, Jr."
Business owners register LLCs with state, rather than federal, agencies, so LLC naming requirements vary somewhat from state to state. There is no state that requires the use of a comma in the name.
The comma should come before the word "but" when it is used to separate two independent clauses. For example: "I wanted to go to the store, but it started raining."
before
No, a comma is not necessary.
no
Yes, you can use a comma after "before" when it is used as a conjunction or adverb to indicate time, but it is not always necessary. It depends on the structure of the sentence and whether the comma helps with clarity or readability.
Yes, a comma is typically used before "as" when it is used as a conjunction to introduce a dependent clause in a sentence.
You would use a comma before it. Xerox, Inc.
A comma is not typically used before "therefore." However, a comma may be used after "therefore" to separate it from the rest of the sentence when it is starting the clause.
A comma is used before a coordinating conjunction (such as "and," "but," "or") that connects two independent clauses in a compound sentence. For example: "I like coffee, but she prefers tea."
if the main or most important part is before the main parts you use a comma, but if it is after then no comma