After Example: Therefore, the restaurant was terrible.
yes
No. Example: "It can therefore be declared that ancestors of modern alligators were present during the time of the dinosaurs."
comma in front of therefore; semi colon in back of therefore
No, a comma is not necessary when writing "thanks a lot." You can simply write "Thanks a lot" without a comma.
I do not use a comma before and after that word, therefore you will not see it in any sentence I have written.
Before eg. The television has broken, therefore I will get it fixed.
it goes after. like ... so, what did you do at the weekend? There you gooo :D
Use comma in a writing. Procedurel Text, Recounts Or others.
you would only need to use a comma if you were writing a messege like this ex. Hi Mary, how are you? but if it was a conversation it could be Hi Mary ! ( or period)
It depends on what you're writing. Here are 2 examples, one with a comma before and one with a comma after. Anyway, I didn't want to go. She can't help you, anyway.
Not necessarily either. There is no word or phrase in English that requires a comma. Commas are a feature of sentence structure, not of words. " Your data is incomplete and your conclusion is therefore wrong." both before and after UNLESS its at the start of a new sentence "i like to run, therefore, i run a lot. yes, but should also reference to lexis and structures.
Say your sentence aloud. If you find you pause before the word 'therefore', you will probably want to insert a comma. If you do not pause, no comma is required. Use a comma when the sense requires it, not because you have a specific word in your sentence.