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They, appositives, are almost always separated by commas. Take the word appositive in the previous sentence. It is itself an appositive in this case.
A sentence with three commas may be a complex sentence with multiple dependent clauses separated by commas.
With NO exceptions, periods and commas go INSIDE the quotation marks. However, question marks (if the question comes at the end of the sentence) are put following the clause with the quotation marks outside the question mark. If there are two clauses within the sentence separated by a conjunction, and there is a semi colon required, the semi colon at the end of the first clause goes outside the quotation marks.
It is called an appositive phrase when a phrase separated by commas provides extra information about a noun. This can help provide clarification or additional details about the noun in the sentence.
That's a clause. You should always pause at the end of a clause, much like a kitten, which has claws at the end of its paws.
When you have a non defining relative clause. egJacks house, which has been on the market for years, has just been sold.In this sentence the words between the commas are called a non defining relative clause. The clause gives extra (but not essential) information about the subject. The relative clause can be omitted. If the non defining clause is omitted the sentence will still make sense.When you have a defining clause no commas are used and the clause gives essential information to identify who or what you are talking about.The house which I showed you last week has just been painted
a clause is a phrase were you use detail commas
Punctuation used in a relative clause includes commas, dashes, or parentheses. These are used to set off the clause from the rest of the sentence or to provide additional information about the noun it is referring to.
The sentence should include commas as follows: "Michael, Jessica's brother, does not drink." Placing the commas around "Jessica's brother" sets it as a non-essential clause, providing additional information about Michael without changing the sentence's meaning.
A clause with a relative pronoun can be punctuated by placing commas before and after the clause if it provides additional, non-essential information. If the clause is essential to the sentence’s meaning, no commas are used.
A list of words separated by commas is called a "comma-separated list" or a "comma-delimited list."
I am pretty sure, that I just got a perfect score. The comma should be placed after "sure" to separate the introductory phrase from the main clause.