The use of a comma following the word "also" at the beginning of a sentence would depend on the context.
If the word "also" introduced a new thought, for example, it would be appropriate. An example might be, "Also, the government wanted to ..."
If, however, the word "also" merely contributed additional information that was incidental to the main thought, it would not necessarily be followed by a comma. An example might be, "Also in the cast [of a movie or play] were ..."
Yes,
No, only after a full stop (period). Also do not capitalise "The" and "A" in your sentence.
You might say "Hello, everyone" out loud, but I would not start a written sentence with it. It's better to be more formal when writing. Of course, if you have a character in a story who is coming into a place and saying "Hello, everyone!" that is different. Also, please notice that there should be a comma between "hello" and "everyone."
There are two accepted punctuation marks to enclose an explanatory part of a sentence. The most common is the comma, as in the example below.When watching for platypuses, shy and reclusive Australian monotremes, you must keep very still.Brackets (also known as parentheses) are also acceptable for explanations, as seen in the sentence just written,
Basically, any word can be used in the beginning of a sentence.
Yes, but I wouldn't use also at the beginning of a sentence.
yes, you should just like I did there
If a sentence consists of two independent clauses with a comma between them, it is a comma splice. That is, the part before the comma can stand on its own as a sentence, and the part after the comma can also stand on its own as a sentence, then it is a comma splice. If there is no punctuation there instead of a comma, it is known as a run-on sentence.
I'm assuming you meant to ask: "If the word...", and not: "Is the word..." There is no comma after "oops." Start a sentence with a capital letter, and place an exclamation mark after the word "oops." Also, use a comma after the word "sentence", just before the "is there..."--or second-- part of your question. Oops! I've spent more time on this than I thought I would...
The word "also" does not require a comma after it, but it depends on how it is used. This sentence does not need a comma after "also": Implementation of the Proposed Project also would enable NID to meet future needs.
You would never do that. Ever.
It depends. Here are examples: In this sentence, a comma is only necessary after the "for example": For example, yesterday she fell down and didn't even cry. In this sentence, a comma is necessary before and after "for example": You, for example, would also be depressed if you were failing trigonometry.
Depends on the sentence as well as the paragraph
If you mean a comma as opposed to no punctuation, it depends on the structure of the whole sentence. Say it aloud - if you naturally pause before the word 'also', it's probably a good idea to write a comma. No pause, no comma. If you mean a comma as opposed to a different punctuation mark, it depends on the structure of the whole sentence. There is no catch-all answer.
A comma's job is a pause in the sentence, mainly for speaking the comma allows you to take a break while continuing the same sentence, it is also good for making lists.
Yes,
Not necessarily. There is no English word that requires a comma after it. Most commas go where you pause when speaking. We say Plus or minus twelve is the answer, with no pause. You probably mean it in the sense of additionally or also, however, as in Plus, you get a black eye! If you have to ask, you should know that plus is such a low choice of words to start a written sentence that the presence or absence of the comma doesn't really matter.