Before.
Example:
I would have punctuated correctly, but the friendly folks on answers.com were misinformed.
A comma typically comes before 'but' when it connects two independent clauses. However, if 'but' is used in a compound predicate, it usually does not need a comma before it.
In general, when "but" is used as a conjunction, a comma is not needed before it. However, if the phrase following "but" is an independent clause, then a comma is typically placed before "but."
Yes, a comma should be placed before "i.e." to separate it from the rest of the sentence.
Yes, when naming a state in a sentence, a comma should be placed after the city and before the state. For example: "I live in Chicago, Illinois."
Yes, in most cases, a comma should be placed before "of whom" in a sentence. This comma is used to set off a dependent clause or phrase that is providing additional information about the subject.
A comma is typically placed before "or" when it separates independent clauses in a sentence. However, a comma is not needed after "or" in most cases.
In general, when "but" is used as a conjunction, a comma is not needed before it. However, if the phrase following "but" is an independent clause, then a comma is typically placed before "but."
No.Sample:Susan, Jane and Amanda are coming as well as our neighbours.
Yes it can, but some people say you shouldn't put a comma in front of an and.
The comma should come before the word "but" when it is used to separate two independent clauses. For example: "I wanted to go to the store, but it started raining."
A comma should typically come before the word "but" when it is used to connect two independent clauses. If "but" is used to join two elements within a single clause, then a comma is usually not necessary.
"Inc" is not a word, it's an abbreviation for "Incorporated," and there should be a comma before it.
A comma should be placed before the word 'but'. For example, "I wanted to go to the shop, but I could not find my shoes."
In American English, a comma is placed before a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS - for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) when it is connecting two independent clauses. However, in British English, the comma is usually omitted before the conjunction.
The sentence "He graduated from college and got his diploma" should not have a comma anywhere. If the second part were an independent clause, there would be a comma before the "and". For example, "He graduated from college, and he wore a clown costume to the ceremony."
No.
A period should come before the footnote at the end of a sentence, while a comma should not.
Comma's are the hardest punctuation mark to place in a sentence. A comma can be placed after instead at the beginning of a sentence if the sentence is a continuation of the subject in the one before it.