No. Example: "It can therefore be declared that ancestors of modern alligators were present during the time of the dinosaurs."
No. There is no rule that a comma must always follow the word "which." In a parenthetical or appositive phrase, however, a comma may be required.Example:I did what I thought was right which, as I came to find out, was not.
comma in front of therefore; semi colon in back of therefore
No, a comma does not go after a name all the time. One puts a comma between a the names in a list. The people that are coming on Wednesday are Mary, John, James, Ingrid and Jo.
I do not use a comma before and after that word, therefore you will not see it in any sentence I have written.
No, the comma does not always go after "nowadays" at the beginning of a sentence. Whether a comma is needed depends on the context and the rest of the sentence. If "nowadays" is being used to introduce a contrast or emphasize a point, a comma may be used. However, if "nowadays" is used as part of the subject or the main idea of the sentence, a comma may not be necessary.
yes
After Example: Therefore, the restaurant was terrible.
No. There is no rule that a comma must always follow the word "which." In a parenthetical or appositive phrase, however, a comma may be required.Example:I did what I thought was right which, as I came to find out, was not.
Yes
comma in front of therefore; semi colon in back of therefore
The comma always goes after the name in the beginning of a letter.
No, a comma does not go after a name all the time. One puts a comma between a the names in a list. The people that are coming on Wednesday are Mary, John, James, Ingrid and Jo.
I do not use a comma before and after that word, therefore you will not see it in any sentence I have written.
No, the comma does not always go after "nowadays" at the beginning of a sentence. Whether a comma is needed depends on the context and the rest of the sentence. If "nowadays" is being used to introduce a contrast or emphasize a point, a comma may be used. However, if "nowadays" is used as part of the subject or the main idea of the sentence, a comma may not be necessary.
Before eg. The television has broken, therefore I will get it fixed.
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.
No. There is no word in English that always requires a comma before it.