No. It is preferable to start a new sentence with your additional idea, beginning with " Yet ".
Not necessarily. The comma indicates a pause or "change of direction" in the thought. The comma goes before yet when it means "although," and starts a new clause. For example: "I haven't yet seen her" and "I knew her, yet I did not recognize her."
A comma typically goes before "so" when it is used at the beginning of a sentence to indicate a reason or result. However, when "so" is used as a conjunction in the middle of a sentence, it does not usually need a comma before it.
A comma is typically used before "but" when it connects two independent clauses. However, if "but" is joining phrases within a single sentence, a comma is not necessary.
When which is used to introduce a nonrestrictive adjectivial clause it must it must follow a comma. But there are numerous examples where which does not need to follow a comma. Including: Which melon do you want? I can't tell which melon to buy.
Before. Example: I would have punctuated correctly, but the friendly folks on answers.com were misinformed.
Not necessarily. The comma indicates a pause or "change of direction" in the thought. The comma goes before yet when it means "although," and starts a new clause. For example: "I haven't yet seen her" and "I knew her, yet I did not recognize her."
No. There is no word in English that always requires a comma before it.
In American English, a comma is placed before a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS - for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) when it is connecting two independent clauses. However, in British English, the comma is usually omitted before the conjunction.
It is usually not necessary.
Typically, there is no need for a comma before the word "as." However, using one is not technically wrong, just superfluous.
A comma typically goes before "so" when it is used at the beginning of a sentence to indicate a reason or result. However, when "so" is used as a conjunction in the middle of a sentence, it does not usually need a comma before it.
Before EX: I need eggs, and butter.
not in all cases.
you don't need comma
The general rule is that it doesn't need a comma before it. Example: I like apples as well as guavas.
A comma is typically used before "but" when it connects two independent clauses. However, if "but" is joining phrases within a single sentence, a comma is not necessary.
yes