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.
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 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.
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'.
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 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.
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.
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma.
yes
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma. Commas are features of the sentence. Sometimes a comma may go before if, for example when it introduces a new clause: We will wear rain-gear, if it becomes necessary. And sometimes a comma may go after if, for example in this sentence, when another thought is inserted into the structure. Generally there is no comma with if.
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.
Yes, but a space comes after the comma like this:, inc