I believe that when you have an appositive in a sentence that when it is not necessary you surround it with commas and when it is necessary, you don't use commas. This is what I believe the rule is, but I am not 100% sure. Anyone feel free to correct me if this is in any way not correct.
Usually you would set off parenthetical phrases with commas, although you can, of course, also use actual parentheses.
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.
Example sentence - You should slow down when driving onto the off ramp of a highway.
A Parenthetical Expression Is A Sentence Set Off By A Comma After A Subject.
You can cut off as many pieces as you want. Once you decide that, you'll be able to figure out how long each piece should be.
The appositive is "a star", which renames the noun phrase "the sun".An appositive should be set off from the rest of the sentence by commas before and after.
It's hard to see because an appositive should be set off by commas. The sentence should be, 'Lisa must meet your brother, Richard, before he goes to college in the fall.'The appositive is the noun Richard, which restates the noun 'brother'.
Yes, that's correct. An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames or explains another noun, and it is typically offset by commas for clarity. It provides additional information about the noun it follows.
An appositive is a phrase that renames a noun or noun phrase and is set off by commas. It provides additional information about the noun it refers to.
Do you use commas to off set the phrase as well as
The sentence could be revised with commas as: "The king walked and talked half an hour after, his head was cut off."
With correct punctuation, your sentence is:Matt, a journalist for a U.S. newspaper, was assigned to cover a story in Dubai.The phrase "a journalist for a U.S. newspaper" is called an appositive phrase, and should be set off by commas before and after.
There is no appositive in the sentence given.An appositive is a noun or noun phrase that renames another noun or pronoun just before it.An appositive is set off in a sentence with a comma before and after it.Examples of the sentence with appositive are:Your uncle, Harvey, likes to pinch your cheek.The noun 'Harvey' renames the noun phrase 'your uncle'.Your Uncle Harvey, an old man, likes to pinch your cheek.The noun phrase 'an old man' renames the noun phrase 'your Uncle Harvey'.That man, your Uncle Harvey, likes to pinch your cheek.The noun phrase 'your Uncle Harvey' renames the noun phrase 'that man'.
An appositive phrase is something that clarifies a noun, usually set off by commas. So in the sentece "The girl, a brunette, wanted to dye her hair," the appositive would be "a brunette."
Use commas to set off nonrestrictive elements. Do not use commas to set off restrictive elements. A restrictive element defines or limits the meaning of the word it modifies and is therefore essential to the meaning of the sentence.
First off, there is technically no participial phrase in the sentence currently, for participial phrases must be set off by commas. If commas were included at the appropriate places to indicate a participial phrase, though, the sentence would read, "Simple jewelry, left behind by ancient Egyptians, can be very valuable today." The participial phrase in this case is "left behind by ancient Egyptians," because it modifies the subject (jewelry), is set off by commas, and is not a sentence in itself.
The new driver, Ms. Peters, found the school run along the main street very tiring.In case you wanted to know, the commas go there because you set off appositive phrases (such as Ms. Peters) with commas.