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If you are making a direct address it should be "Thank you, John" - with the comma.
Not usually : "Thank you for listening to me" does not need a comma. However, if you write their name afterward ("Thanks, Fred."), you need a comma after thank you.
Not necessarily. I want to thank you for helping me last night. A comma would wrong here. "Thank you," said Sam. There is a comma here, but it is not because of the words "thank you." You would write: "I want ice cream," said Sam. Thank you usually stands by itself or with an appellation. "Thank you, Sam!" In this case, the comma is there to set off the appellation, not because you used the words thank you. For example, you would write: "Go screw yourself, Sam!" or "Sam, thank you so much."
it depends where its at in a sentence
Adding a comma is perfectly proper, but not compulsory. In speech, adding a tiny pause between 'you' and 'Jim' tells him that you really are grateful. When writing, a comma signals that little pause.
As you have stated it, that is not entirely correct. If it was a single sentence then the word "thank" would not be capitalized, and if it is two sentences, then there should be a period after "assessment". You might find it more economical to say "Thank you for the assessment."
When you address someone directly, you offset their name or pronoun with a comma(s). "Joe, please give me a hand." "I'll be there in a minute, Mom." "Thank you, Peter."
No.
i don't understandmake a more efficentplease thank you!
The style manuals say that anytime you address a person directly, their name should be set off with commas. The correct syntax is: Thank you, John. Hello, Susan. Don't look, Sharon!
The style manuals say that anytime you address a person directly, their name should be set off with commas. The correct syntax is: Thank you, John. Hello, Susan. Don't look, Sharon!
The style manuals say that anytime you address a person directly, their name should be set off with commas. The correct syntax is: Thank you, John. Hello, Susan. Don't look, Sharon!