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.
The comma should go after "dog" in the sentence "Oh, have you seen my dog, Wolfie?" to indicate a pause after "dog" and to set off the name "Wolfie" as a nonrestrictive appositive.
A comma may go before or after, or not be there at all. The placement of commas is entirely a matter of sentence structure. There is no word in English that requires a comma.
The comma goes after the word 'because' when it is used at the beginning of a dependent clause, separating the clause from the main clause. For example: "I stayed inside, because it was raining."
The comma typically goes before the parentheses if it is part of the main sentence. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period or other punctuation mark will typically go inside the parentheses.
It depends.For example, in the sentence:She asked if she could go too.There is no comma. But, In the sentence:She asked, "Can I go?"There is a comma.
The comma always goes after the name in the beginning of a letter.
The comma goes after the business between the name and the LLC. Business Company, LLC
No, a comma does not go before the word 'in'.
YesExample: Daniel, Steven
The comma should go after "dog" in the sentence "Oh, have you seen my dog, Wolfie?" to indicate a pause after "dog" and to set off the name "Wolfie" as a nonrestrictive appositive.
A comma may go before or after, or not be there at all. The placement of commas is entirely a matter of sentence structure. There is no word in English that requires a comma.
yes
There is no word in English that necessarily requires a comma.
The comma goes after the word 'because' when it is used at the beginning of a dependent clause, separating the clause from the main clause. For example: "I stayed inside, because it was raining."
The comma typically goes before the parentheses if it is part of the main sentence. If the parentheses contain a complete sentence, the period or other punctuation mark will typically go inside the parentheses.
If they are part of the title, they will go within the quotation marks.
The comma would come after it.