Yes, you should include a comma after the name and before "PhD." For example, "John Doe, PhD," is the correct format.
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
The general rule is to place a comma after "PhD" when it is used as a suffix after a person's name (e.g., John Doe, PhD). However, if "PhD" is used in the middle of a sentence to describe someone's credentials, no comma is needed (e.g., John Doe has a PhD in Economics).
Yes, you typically include a comma after the name and before the degree. For example: "John Doe, PhD."
Not necessarily. There is no word in English that requires a comma before or after it.
no
after
After
Before
It could go either ways?
Yes, but a space comes after the comma like this:, inc
The comma would come after it.