Use commas if the name is not essential to what you are trying to say. For example, if you want to express that someone was hurt by a member of his very own family, you might write, "He was cheated by his own brother." You might want to add some additional information, such as the name of his brother, "He was cheated by his own brother, Samuel." Then you would use a comma.
If you were conveying this information to readers who knew the family, possibly from your prior narrative, and you wanted to point your finger at Samuel, you would write, "George had three brothers, Fred, Pat, and Samuel. He was cheated by his own brother Samuel." Then you would not use commas.
Commas should be used after the first term, stopping at the "and" of the last term, if you don't use oxford commas. For example: There was a dog, cat, bird, fish and monkey. If you do use oxford commas, the comma goes before the and, as well: There was a dog, cat, bird, fish, and monkey. You never use the comma before the last term.
No, names are not set off with commas unless they are part of a list or if a title follows the name. For example, "John Smith" or "Dr. Jane Doe" do not require commas.
You use commas when your writing a list of things like fruit names. You would not just leave it like this apple orange grapes and pear. You would rather use commas like this apple, orange, grapes and pear.
WikiAnswers wishes for you to use commas and proper punctuation in your answers, but only question marks and a few other symbols are allowed in asking questions. The use of periods and hyphens are sometimes allowed, as well as other specialized characters such as the degree ° symbol.
In a single-line address, use commas to separate distinct elements such as the street address, city, state, and ZIP code. For example: 123 Main Street, Anytown, CA 12345.
To combine multiple names from different rows into a single row, you can use a spreadsheet program like Excel or Google Sheets. You can utilize the CONCATENATE function or the "&" operator to merge the names. For example, if names are in cells A1, A2, and A3, you can use the formula =A1 & ", " & A2 & ", " & A3 to create a single row with all names separated by commas. Alternatively, you could copy the names into a text editor and manually join them with commas or other separators.
No. Language names are proper nouns, which are not allowed in Scrabble.
No. Proper names (capitalized words) are not allowed in Scrabble.
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You can use as many commas as needed in a sentence to maintain clarity and coherence, but it is generally recommended to keep the sentence concise and avoid excessive use of commas.
In a list of family names, commas are used to separate each name. For example, if you are listing the Smith, Johnson, and Brown families, you would write it as "the Smith, Johnson, and Brown families." The final comma before "and" is known as the Oxford comma, and its use is optional depending on the style guide you are following.