In formal prose, commas and other punctuation marks are used to help the reader follow the structure of a sentence. In writing dialogue, they may be used to indicate pauses in speech. The two uses do not necessarily lead to the same results.
Yes, when paraphrasing direct quotes, it is important to use commas to separate phrases that are rearranged or rephrased. Commas help to clearly indicate the structure and flow of the sentence.
Yes, they help symbolise a pause in speech.
to help the flow and pronunciation of a sentence
Yes, commas are used around an idea that interrupts a sentence. This interruption is known as an "interjection" and is set off by commas to help clarify the structure of the sentence.
It is a stupid question
Commas in a sentence are used to separate ideas or elements within the sentence. They help to clarify the meaning by indicating pauses, separations, or breaks in the text.
7 commas
A person with two commas is a millionaire. 1,000,000. Count them. Two commas.
The commas between numbers in place value are commas.
(Commas help) : in words, 3,400,000,000 is three-billion-four-hundred-million.
The sentence should read: "Well, you're just in time, Willy, to help with a demonstration." Commas are placed after "Well" to indicate a pause, after "time" to separate the direct address "Willy," and before the phrase "to help with a demonstration" for clarity.
Googol has 33 commas.