Depends, really. If you're inserting the title of a novel, then yes. If you're inserting a quote and still continuing with the the sentence, then yes. If you're at the end of the sentence, then all you need is a period.
NO YOU DON'T PUT COMMA IN THE WORD THAT BECAUSE IT HAS A QUESTION MARK IN IT,AND THAT QUESTION MARK REPRESENT IT'S OWN FUNCTION.
No, typically a comma is not placed after a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. Commas are used to separate elements within a sentence.
A comma should follow "such as" when introducing examples in a sentence.
The punctuation mark you are referring to is the semicolon (;). It combines the functionality of a colon and a comma, used to connect closely related independent clauses or as a super comma in a list.
When forming a question, a comma is not typically used before the question mark. However, a comma can be used to separate a list of items in the question itself, such as "Do you need apples, oranges, or bananas?"
To seperate the words in a sentence.
NO YOU DON'T PUT COMMA IN THE WORD THAT BECAUSE IT HAS A QUESTION MARK IN IT,AND THAT QUESTION MARK REPRESENT IT'S OWN FUNCTION.
You cannot end a chapter with a comma; you need to end it with a period(.), exclamation point(!), or a question mark(?).
No, typically a comma is not placed after a punctuation mark such as a period, question mark, or exclamation point. Commas are used to separate elements within a sentence.
There is no such thing as a quotion.
Comma
With NO exceptions, the comma and period should go BEFORE the closing quotation mark. Always.
comma
Comma
A comma is a punctuation mark that separates phrases in a sentence. It looks like ,
A comma should follow "such as" when introducing examples in a sentence.
No, the quotation marks go after the comma or period.