Yes, it can. For example: The boy ran, jumped, and landed in the sand pit. Commas would go after both "ran" and "jumped."
Yes, you should use a comma to separate a dependent clause and a verb.
In certain circumstances you can.You should not use a comma to separate a verb from its object, but if there is (for example) a list or an intervening phrase that requires a comma, then it could happen that a comma will follow a verb.For example:Yesterday I bathed, shaved, and excercised.She ate, as far as anyone in the audience could determine, twenty hot dogs.But the following would be WRONG:She ate, twenty hot dogs.Yesterday I bathed, the dog.
No, a comma does not always go after the word "however." It depends on its placement within a sentence and the intended meaning. When "however" is used as a conjunctive adverb to join two independent clauses, a comma is typically used before it. However, if "however" is used within a single clause as an adverb to modify a verb, no comma is typically needed.
It depends.For example, in the sentence:She asked if she could go too.There is no comma. But, In the sentence:She asked, "Can I go?"There is a comma.
In direct speech, a comma is used to separate the reporting verb from the speaker's actual words. In indirect speech, a comma is used before the beginning of the reported speech to indicate the change from direct to indirect speech.
Go Team is really a bad form of saying, or broken English of, Go to the Team. But when you follow the verb with a comma, Team becomes the group that you are addressing, not a direct object or destination following the verb. Go, John, go ! Does not mean, go to the bathroom.
Yes, you should use a comma to separate a dependent clause and a verb.
No. An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. A comma is a form of punctuation.
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
In certain circumstances you can.You should not use a comma to separate a verb from its object, but if there is (for example) a list or an intervening phrase that requires a comma, then it could happen that a comma will follow a verb.For example:Yesterday I bathed, shaved, and excercised.She ate, as far as anyone in the audience could determine, twenty hot dogs.But the following would be WRONG:She ate, twenty hot dogs.Yesterday I bathed, the dog.
No, a comma does not always go after the word "however." It depends on its placement within a sentence and the intended meaning. When "however" is used as a conjunctive adverb to join two independent clauses, a comma is typically used before it. However, if "however" is used within a single clause as an adverb to modify a verb, no comma is typically needed.
In the sentence "A beautiful sunny day dawned," there is no need for a comma, as it is a simple declarative sentence with a clear subject and verb. If additional information were added, such as in a compound sentence or a list, a comma might be necessary. However, in its current form, the sentence stands perfectly without punctuation.
yes
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma.
The comma would come after it.
Yes, but a space comes after the comma like this:, inc
comma