Sometimes but if one uses a comma in a question here it gets automatically removed.
Yes, while I am answering this question, you will be reading the answer.
This is an example sentence.
Basically, a comma is a direction from the writer to the reader to give a little pause while reading. If the sentence begins with the word 'although, no comma is required. If the sentence has although in the middle, a comma may be place after it.I helped him, although he had never helped me.
It depends how your saying the sentence.For example: We should keep the library open, so kids can read. In this sentence the comma goes after 'open' because 'we should keep the library open' can be a sentence. ha ha ha
There are incidents in writing when you do use a comma and a "and" together in the same sentence structure. The coma comes before the "and", not after it. Here is an example: I love to eat french fries, bacon, and chocolate; not together though. Susie said, "I love to have music playing and," she sneezed, "watch TV while I am doing my homework. It drives my mother crazy that I get straight "A"s and she did not when she was a teenager." Notice that in this sentence her dialog is interrupted right when she says "and". Therefore a comma was used. This would be a very narrow instance when that would happen. Remember that the comma goes before the and when you are listing things in a sentence. The and is used before the last item.
With or without a comma depending upon the word is the way in which a conjunction is punctuated in a sentence. For example, a comma may precede the conjunctions "and" and "but" even though it will not go before such conjunctions as "even though," "whereas," and "while."
A comma's job is a pause in the sentence, mainly for speaking the comma allows you to take a break while continuing the same sentence, it is also good for making lists.
A period should come before the footnote at the end of a sentence, while a comma should not.
Basically, a comma is a direction from the writer to the reader to give a little pause while reading. If the sentence begins with the word 'although, no comma is required. If the sentence has although in the middle, a comma may be place after it.I helped him, although he had never helped me.
no
It depends how your saying the sentence.For example: We should keep the library open, so kids can read. In this sentence the comma goes after 'open' because 'we should keep the library open' can be a sentence. ha ha ha
As a conjunction that begins a subordinate clause, the word "while" doesn't need a preceding comma when it ends a sentence. For example, The children ate all the cotton candy while their aunt cleaned up the spilled drinks.
,Always.
It depends on the context and structure of the sentence.
There are incidents in writing when you do use a comma and a "and" together in the same sentence structure. The coma comes before the "and", not after it. Here is an example: I love to eat french fries, bacon, and chocolate; not together though. Susie said, "I love to have music playing and," she sneezed, "watch TV while I am doing my homework. It drives my mother crazy that I get straight "A"s and she did not when she was a teenager." Notice that in this sentence her dialog is interrupted right when she says "and". Therefore a comma was used. This would be a very narrow instance when that would happen. Remember that the comma goes before the and when you are listing things in a sentence. The and is used before the last item.
With or without a comma depending upon the word is the way in which a conjunction is punctuated in a sentence. For example, a comma may precede the conjunctions "and" and "but" even though it will not go before such conjunctions as "even though," "whereas," and "while."
While I would not say that every use of the word anyway requires a comma, without exception, it is true that anyway often does call for a comma. Just remember, if you would pause slightly while speaking that sentence aloud, that is where a comma should go.
A comma's job is a pause in the sentence, mainly for speaking the comma allows you to take a break while continuing the same sentence, it is also good for making lists.
A comma before "and" depends on the specific context. In a series of items, some style guides recommend using a comma before "and" (the Oxford comma) for clarity, while others omit it. In other cases, such as coordinating conjunctions joining independent clauses, a comma before "and" is typically used.