NO!!! The comma comes before 'although'. She said, 'I am tired", although he said "I am not tired".
No its not a conjunctive adverb. But is used as coordinate conjunction. conjunctive adverbs are sentence connectors which you put semicolon (;) before it and comma after it (,).
When he told me the news, I was shocked: although I should have guessed.
Most lines require a semi-colon and the end. It's likely that that line does. A parse error is an error in syntax so you need to add ; at the end of the line like so:
I wouldn't use a semicolon in a conditional (if) sentence. Semicolons can join two independent clauses without a conjunction. The "if" clause in a conditional sentence is dependent, not independent.
semicolon, comma, colon...
add a comma after the semicolon.
add a comma after the semicolon.
no
Comma=After conjustion in a compound sentence Semicolon=Replaces a conjustion and a comma Comma Example I love pizza, and I love chesse. Colon Examples I love pizza; I love Chesse.
When you combine two independent clauses, you need to separate them with a semicolon--not a comma. If you use a comma instead of a semicolon, the result is called a comma splice.
The name of the punctuation mark with a dot directly above a comma is called a "semicolon."
comma
The punctuation mark you are referring to is the semicolon (;). It combines the functionality of a colon and a comma, used to connect closely related independent clauses or as a super comma in a list.
a comma (,) is used to separate parts of a sentence and indicates a slight pause when reading/speaking. a semicolon (;) is used to separate main clauses and indicates a longer pause than a comma. A semicolon also separates items in a listing, when one or more of the items contains a comma.
If a sentence needs a pause in the middle and a comma is not strong enough, then a semicolon can be used.
A semicolon looks much like a colon, but instead of having two periods, one floating and one below, a comma resides below the period. A semicolon- ;