Yes, because there is a pause.
A conjunction is a part of speech an therefore has to be a word. A comma on the other hand is a punctuation mark. A semicolon can be used in place of a conjunction.
The comma goes after the word "but" when it is used to connect two independent clauses in a sentence. This separates the contrasting ideas provided by each clause for clarity and readability in the sentence structure.
With or without a comma depending upon the word is the way in which a conjunction is punctuated in a sentence. For example, a comma may precede the conjunctions "and" and "but" even though it will not go before such conjunctions as "even though," "whereas," and "while."
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
A comma typically comes before the word "so" when it is used as a conjunction to connect two independent clauses. For example: "I was feeling tired, so I decided to take a nap."
You ussualy put a comma before the conjuction. On rare evernts you put the comma after.
Yes, when combining two independent clauses with a conjunction like "because" in a compound sentence, you typically use a comma before the conjunction.
no a comma is not needed behind every conjunction. like the word and or or. For Example: Would u like cake AND lemonade OR hambugers AND hotdogs. hop this helped:) -alessandra
You do not typically use a comma directly before or after the word "but" when it is used as a conjunction to connect two independent clauses. However, you may use a comma before "but" when it is used to introduce a contrasting element in a sentence.
No, you do not need to add a comma before using the word "plus" when connecting two phrases or clauses. The word "plus" can be used as a conjunction to join two ideas without requiring a comma.
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma.
In a compound sentence, the comma would be placed before the word but.