Let me connect you with an excellent contact person.
It should be relatively easy to connect the dots.
That street will connect with the street we want.
The word in Sanskrit for connect is "yoga."
Yes, typically a comma is used after the word 'furthermore' when it is used to introduce additional information or to connect ideas.
Noun forms for the verb to connect are connection, connector.
Yes, "and" is often used before a word that begins with a vowel to connect phrases or clauses in a sentence smoothly.
If you are using the word but to tie two sentences together, then you put a comma before the word but just as you would before the word and. If you use but within a sentence it does not use punctuation unless it would require it for and in the same situation. Her dress came below her ankles but did not touch the floor. That does not connect two separate sentences. Her dress came below her ankles and touched the floor. That also does not connect two separate sentences. You use the comma when you connect two sentences. He was a good student, and he ran fast. He was a good student, but he could not kick a ball.
I connect the red wire to the blue wire to deactivate a bomb.
Let me connect you to Customer Service.
The word in Sanskrit for connect is "yoga."
The word is spelled connect. "The military used a water bridge to connect two islands." "To use a toaster, a person must connect the plug to a power source." If you meant the State, it is Connecticut.
no
uncouple from un- and coupledisconnect from dis- and connect
use any of the freeware / shareware add-ons for word pad or use the web to connect to dictionary.com.
In the King James version no form of the word - connect - appears anywhere. connect, connecting, connection etc.
Yes, typically a comma is used after the word 'furthermore' when it is used to introduce additional information or to connect ideas.
The word connect has two syllables.
Noun forms for the verb to connect are connection, connector.
Yes, "and" is often used before a word that begins with a vowel to connect phrases or clauses in a sentence smoothly.