Yes.
Example:
Unfortunately, I forgot to get milk while I was grocery shopping.
Yes, you can place a comma after "thus" if it is used at the beginning of a sentence to introduce a result or conclusion. For example, "Thus, we can conclude that the experiment was a success."
I'm assuming you meant to ask: "If the word...", and not: "Is the word..." There is no comma after "oops." Start a sentence with a capital letter, and place an exclamation mark after the word "oops." Also, use a comma after the word "sentence", just before the "is there..."--or second-- part of your question. Oops! I've spent more time on this than I thought I would...
The correct sentence is "Look! cried Louis, it's a rainbow." Place the comma after "Look" and capitalize the beginning of the dialogue sentence.
Yes, a comma is typically placed before a conjunction in a compound sentence or to separate items in a list.
There could be a comma before "as well" but it isn't mandatory. Try speaking the sentence out loud. If you pause at a particular place, then that is where you would put in a comma.
Comma's are the hardest punctuation mark to place in a sentence. A comma can be placed after instead at the beginning of a sentence if the sentence is a continuation of the subject in the one before it.
Yes, you can place a comma after "thus" if it is used at the beginning of a sentence to introduce a result or conclusion. For example, "Thus, we can conclude that the experiment was a success."
What sentence If u r talking about the question u would say where is the place of comma in this sentence, than give the sentence
I'm assuming you meant to ask: "If the word...", and not: "Is the word..." There is no comma after "oops." Start a sentence with a capital letter, and place an exclamation mark after the word "oops." Also, use a comma after the word "sentence", just before the "is there..."--or second-- part of your question. Oops! I've spent more time on this than I thought I would...
If "at" is the beginning of a phrase, then a comma would be used. So, an example: Turn left, at the green windmill, to go to the old man's house.
The correct sentence is "Look! cried Louis, it's a rainbow." Place the comma after "Look" and capitalize the beginning of the dialogue sentence.
Yes, it is a prepositional phrase.
A comma causes a pause in a sentence and a period is a full stop. Never place a period where God has placed a comma.
The sentence, "She was born in Kansas in 1782," does not require any comma. The meaning of the sentence is perfectly clear without one. I'm not aware of any rule that automatically requires a comma following a place name. There is, I believe, a rule requiring a comma if the sentence had referred to "Wichita, Kansas." (Of course, one would have to overlook the fact that there was no Wichita, Kansas in 1782.) In the sentence within parenteses, some people place a second comma after Kansas (e.g. ... no Wichita, Kansas, in 1782).
Yes, a comma is typically placed before a conjunction in a compound sentence or to separate items in a list.
There could be a comma before "as well" but it isn't mandatory. Try speaking the sentence out loud. If you pause at a particular place, then that is where you would put in a comma.
Before the speech marks, yes. Unless they're asking or shouting.