Jim grabbed a bottle of ketchup. To go with his fries
Without the sentences provided, I can't determine which sentence uses commas correctly.
no. that sentence is punctuated correctly.
The sentence is not punctuated correctly. It would be clearer if it were written as, "In my opinion, this sentence is depressing." Adding a comma after "in my opinion" helps separate the introductory phrase from the main clause.
Yes, a comma should be placed before "I" when it precedes a coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence. For example, in the sentence "I went to the store, and I bought some milk," the comma is correctly placed before "and." However, if "I" is part of a simple list or not part of a compound sentence, a comma is not needed.
No, the sentence "Do you go to school, Shania?" is punctuated correctly with a question mark after "school" and a comma between "school" and "Shania" to separate the direct address.
a comma splice is basically a sentence where punctuation marks are not placed correctly and are just placed everywhere. Incorrect. A comma splice is an incorrectly used comma to try to join two distinct ideas within one sentence. Changing the comma to a semicolon corrects the sentence. a fused sentence is a sentence that has no punctuation markings anywhere amd just drag out. Usually labelled as a Run-on Sentence, meaning many ideas not correctly separated within one sentence. Better to separate the ideas into several sentences.
Here is an example of a sentence that correctly uses quotation marks: She said, "I will meet you at the park at 3 o'clock."
When you park in front of a meter, put quarters in it. Otherwise, you may find you have a ticket when you return. This example uses the word otherwise and a comma correctly.
no. if but before is a sentence on its on and after but is a sentence on its own then put a comma before but.
well, personally, i continue reading if it is used correctly, but if it is used incorrectly i get verrry upset.
Comma's are the hardest punctuation mark to place in a sentence. A comma can be placed after instead at the beginning of a sentence if the sentence is a continuation of the subject in the one before it.
The correctly punctuated sentence would be: "You are old, Grandpa," William, the young man, said. This structure uses quotation marks to indicate the spoken words, a comma before "Grandpa" to address him directly, and proper attribution of the speaker at the end.