The Court charges you that the mere fact that there has been an accident and as a result thereof, the plaintiffs have been injured does not, in and of itself, entitle the plaintiffs to recover.
It is usually appropriate to place a comma before "but." One should not use a comma after "but."
A conjunction is a part of speech an therefore has to be a word. A comma on the other hand is a punctuation mark. A semicolon can be used in place of a conjunction.
Yes. Example: Unfortunately, I forgot to get milk while I was grocery shopping.
A comma is typically placed before the word "but" when it is connecting two independent clauses. If "but" is used to connect two elements within a single clause, a comma is not needed.
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...
Depending on what the sentence is about you may use a comma before 'called';however, in some instances you may not be allowed to place a comma before the word called.
It is usually appropriate to place a comma before "but." One should not use a comma after "but."
A conjunction is a part of speech an therefore has to be a word. A comma on the other hand is a punctuation mark. A semicolon can be used in place of a conjunction.
Yes. Example: Unfortunately, I forgot to get milk while I was grocery shopping.
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
A comma is typically placed before the word "but" when it is connecting two independent clauses. If "but" is used to connect two elements within a single clause, a comma is not needed.
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma.
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...
No. After the word and comma can not be used, as it is grammatically inappropriate to use comma after conjunctions such as and, which are called coordinate conjunctions.
Not necessarily. There is no word in English that requires a comma.
Certainly, I can add a comma after the word "said," as requested.
Yes, you should capitalize the word after a comma in a sentence.