yes
No, a comma is not used to separate a title and a person's name. Instead, a comma is used to separate the title from other information or to separate items in a list. In the case of "Alumnus Scott," no comma is necessary.
Yes, the comma style button is located on the ribbon in Microsoft Excel. It can be found in the Number group under the Home tab. Clicking on this button applies a predefined comma format to selected cells.
Yes, it is proper to use a comma to separate a month and year in a date format, such as January 2022.
Yes, a comma is typically used between a name and listing credentials. For example: John Smith, PhD.
Yes, in date formats with the month and year (e.g., December 2021), a comma is typically used between the month and the year.
I would expect a comma to be used, unfortunately, this is not always the case!
There is only one comma, but it is not used in switch-case. Character literals are between apostrophes: 'x'
Exclamations are typically separated from the rest of a sentence by a comma. "Oh! I didn't know that!" "Oh, it isn't that important."
The comma goes between the dependent and independent clauses. In this case, the comma goes after "newspaper".
No, a comma is not used to separate a title and a person's name. Instead, a comma is used to separate the title from other information or to separate items in a list. In the case of "Alumnus Scott," no comma is necessary.
Not necessarily. There is no word or phrase that requires a comma. When it means "because," the phrase "in that" often introduces a clause, in which case it is the clause that takes the comma, not the words.
Yes, in this case, you would use a comma between "that" and "that." This helps to separate the repeated word and improve clarity in the sentence.
When the attribution (e.g., 'he said') follows the quote, you should use a comma inside the quotation marks before the attribution and follow it with a period after the attribution. For example: "I am going to the store," he said.
Yes, it most deffinetly does. When you combine two sentences you should always use a comma, unless the sentence already has many commas in it. In which case you get ride of the conjunction and use a semicolon(;).
last comma before the and is not necessary
Depends if you're using it in a sentence like this:Yesterday,I went to school.Then,yes you do need a comma. But if you're using it like this:I went over my friend's house yesterday and it was fun!Then in that case,no you do NOT need a comma.
No, there is not a comma after "except that."