I can give you several sentences.
Yes, the first word after a semicolon should be capitalized if it is the start of a new sentence or independent clause.
No, you do not capitalize after using a semicolon unless it is the start of a new sentence or a proper noun. The word following the semicolon should be lowercase unless it meets the criteria for capitalization.
Punctuation is a feature of sentence structure. There is no word that must take any particular punctuation, and no word that cannot take any particular punctuation.
A semicolon or a comma can follow the word "however" in a sentence.
This is a conjunctive adverb, e.g.: He said he would take care of it; however, I thought I would follow up with you anyway.
Yes, the first word after a semicolon should be capitalized if it is the start of a new sentence or independent clause.
No, you do not capitalize after using a semicolon unless it is the start of a new sentence or a proper noun. The word following the semicolon should be lowercase unless it meets the criteria for capitalization.
Punctuation is a feature of sentence structure. There is no word that must take any particular punctuation, and no word that cannot take any particular punctuation.
A semicolon or a comma can follow the word "however" in a sentence.
Yes, a semicolon could indeed join an incomplete sentence and a complete sentence.
No you can not it is stupid.
A gerund is a verb with the -ing suffix, often turning it from a verb into the subject of a sentence. It is grammatically correct to use one after a semicolon as long as the clause after the semicolon is still independent, that is, it can still stand alone as a separate sentence.
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.
You put it at the beginning or middle after a semicolon. It's a cause and effect type of word Example: She was nice.Therefore, she had many friends.
This is a conjunctive adverb, e.g.: He said he would take care of it; however, I thought I would follow up with you anyway.
The trick is not to use a semicolon with and, but, yet, or or. When using these to combine 2 sentences, you place a comma before them. IE. sentence, and sentence. sentence but sentence. sentence yet sentence. sentence, or sentence. When using a semicolon to combine 2 sentences, a transition word isn't required but can make the sentence flow more smoothly. These can be words like however, furthermore, moreover, in addition, similarly, etc. IE. sentence; however, sentence. The trick is not to use a semicolon with and, but, yet, or or. When using these to combine 2 sentences, you place a comma before them. IE. sentence, and sentence. sentence but sentence. sentence yet sentence. sentence, or sentence. When using a semicolon to combine 2 sentences, a transition word isn't required but can make the sentence flow more smoothly. These can be words like however, furthermore, moreover, in addition, similarly, etc. IE. sentence; however, sentence.
A compound sentence is a sentence that contains at least two complete sentences joined by a conjunction (and, but, or) or semicolon (;). The word its is a possessive pronoun. Any sentence that contains the word its can be made into a compound sentence by connecting another sentence to it correctly. "My dog's name is Rover and its fur is brown."