A comma is not required there, but it would make the sentence read better.
The antonym for a comma is an apostrophe
exclamation poi nt. It should be-- Hi!
The answer to this depends on the rest of the sentence. An easy way to work this out is to imagine a new sentence with 'January 8 1947' replaced by the word 'Monday'. If the new sentence reads better with a comma after Monday, then put one after '1947' in the original. If not, don't.
semicolon, comma, colon...
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Delete commas, that are, not nessecary
Some rules about using a comma is to use it to separate words and words groups with a series of three or more. Another rule is to separate two adjectives when the word 'and' can be used in-between them. More rules on commas can be found online on the Grammer Book website.
Yes, you would generally place a comma after the year in a date like "January 8, 1947." This helps to separate the date from the rest of the sentence for clarity and proper punctuation.
If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.
If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.
In American English punctuation rules, a comma typically comes before the closing quotation mark when the comma is part of the overall sentence. In British English, the comma comes after the closing quotation mark.
A comma splice occurs when two independent clauses are joined together with just a comma. To correct a comma splice, you can replace the comma with a semicolon or period, add a coordinating conjunction after the comma, or restructure the sentence entirely.
A comma is not required there, but it would make the sentence read better.
· ··Siddaganga Institute of Technology (SIT),Tumkur Affiliated to Visveswaraiah Technological University (V.T.U), Belgaum.
A comma splice is the joining of two sentences by a comma without the use of a conjunction. For example:*Horace was a Roman poet, he died in 8 BC.Because these two utterances are complete sentences ("Horace was a Roman poet" and "He died in 8 BC"), they should not be joined with a comma. Here are three ways to improve the mechanics of the example:1. Use a semicolon instead of a comma--Horace was a Roman poet; he died in 8 BC.2. Write it as two sentences, separated by a period--Horace was a Roman poet. He died in 8 BC.3. Connect the two sentences by a conjunction, such as and--Horace was a Roman poet, and he died in 8 BC.
No. The placement of commas has more to do with the flow of the sentence; there are no unbreakable rules for placing commas before or after certain words. Even placing a comma before the word and is correct under certain circumstances.