I would say yes, although I suggest you use the words First, Second, and Last.
I would say yes, although I suggest you use the words First, Second, and Last.
Generally, you put commas before anything that precedes the subject of a sentence. Firstly, I want you to know I really care for that. Secondly, I would like to tell you about my experience with it. Lastly, Next, Finally,
Yes, a comma is typically used after the words yes, no, why, and well when they are the first words in a sentence to indicate a pause or emphasize the response.
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.
It can be either way, although it is more common to leave out the comma. The comma, if used, is called the Oxford comma, the Harvard comma(,) or the serial comma, where the first two refer to prestigious universities and the third refers to the series of items.
I would say yes, although I suggest you use the words First, Second, and Last.
Generally, you put commas before anything that precedes the subject of a sentence. Firstly, I want you to know I really care for that. Secondly, I would like to tell you about my experience with it. Lastly, Next, Finally,
Yes, a comma is typically used after the words yes, no, why, and well when they are the first words in a sentence to indicate a pause or emphasize the response.
Here's an answer that Joshua said: First, Second, and Lastly.
First, second, then, next, after that, later, afterwards, and lastly.
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.
No
It can be either way, although it is more common to leave out the comma. The comma, if used, is called the Oxford comma, the Harvard comma(,) or the serial comma, where the first two refer to prestigious universities and the third refers to the series of items.
yes comma is needed after three or more words in a series.
The best guide is to put a comma when there is a short gap between the words when spoken.
O'clock is a contraction. It is the shortened form meaning "of the clock". (Just so you know, the mark after the o is an apostrophe, not a comma. A comma and an apostrophe look alike. However, a comma is placed lower than the apostrophe. Example- We can go, but not until noon. (A comma is after the word go.) A comma is placed between words. An apostrophy is placed between letters. An apostrophy shows that letters have been omitted. A comma indicates a pause when reading.
A list of words separated by commas is called a "comma-separated list" or a "comma-delimited list."