You would need to add two commas to the sentence. It would read: "There will be, Alice, Bob, Carol, David, and Erin, on the committee."
Most people use commas incorrectly. They either don't use them(,) even when the sentence needs a comma. Or, a writer, uses, too, many commas, and makes, the sentence, confusing, such as in this sentence. NOTE: Extra commas in the above sentence are used to show the problem with using too many commas. Please do NOT 'correct' that sentence.
Charlie understands commas through his programming, which includes rules and patterns for interpreting written language. Commas are used to separate elements in a sentence, such as items in a list or clauses, and Charlie is trained to recognize these patterns to assist with understanding and generating text.
The use of commas is determined by some rules, and through experience with writing down your thoughts. Here are a couple rules for when you should use a comma:between each item in a list -- I ate toast, eggs, and cereal with milk.between a clause and the main body of the sentence -- Though she was tall, she was still shorter than her younger brother.Commas give use spots to pause, to breathe. Many people try to cram in many parts into one sentence and then, add a ton of commas. Other people insert a comma in the wrong places--for example (wrong): My brother, and I went to the store. A comma here splits up the compound subject, when it shouldn't and is incorrect.
Although some of these might seem quite obvious, here are the four main rules that I can think of: Commas are always used in lists of things. Example: I like to eat chocolate, steak, pavlova, ice cream and chops. Commas are either used in lists (like the above example), or when you are saying a sentence and need to pause or take a breath in the middle of it. Commas always come straight after a word, never a space and then the comma. Example: word, is correct. word , is not correct. This is a fairly new rule that was introduced a few years ago, which a lot of people don't actually use: There is never supposed to be a comma in front of the word 'and', as the word 'and' is supposed to be a pause within itself, although most people do not pay attention to this rule. Example: I like turtles, dogs, horses, dolphins, and cats. -This sentence would not be 'gramatically correct, although at the moment no one pays much attention to this rule. I like turtles, dogs, horses, dolphins and cats. -This is the correct way to write it.
The word "committee" is a noun. It refers to a group of people appointed for a specific function, typically within an organization or government.
Most people use commas incorrectly. They either don't use them(,) even when the sentence needs a comma. Or, a writer, uses, too, many commas, and makes, the sentence, confusing, such as in this sentence. NOTE: Extra commas in the above sentence are used to show the problem with using too many commas. Please do NOT 'correct' that sentence.
Charlie understands commas through his programming, which includes rules and patterns for interpreting written language. Commas are used to separate elements in a sentence, such as items in a list or clauses, and Charlie is trained to recognize these patterns to assist with understanding and generating text.
The complete predicate of this sentence is 'fascinate people'.
The use of commas is determined by some rules, and through experience with writing down your thoughts. Here are a couple rules for when you should use a comma:between each item in a list -- I ate toast, eggs, and cereal with milk.between a clause and the main body of the sentence -- Though she was tall, she was still shorter than her younger brother.Commas give use spots to pause, to breathe. Many people try to cram in many parts into one sentence and then, add a ton of commas. Other people insert a comma in the wrong places--for example (wrong): My brother, and I went to the store. A comma here splits up the compound subject, when it shouldn't and is incorrect.
It's "Thank God for good memories, family, friends, and traditions." These are serial commas, otherwise known as Oxford commas. (There is some debate about the comma that goes before "and" in a series, but most people now agree it should be there.) If "Thank God" is an interjection, it would require a comma after it, but it's not an interjection here.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "There were 25 people, Charlene, applying for the job, and I got it." The commas set off the name "Charlene" as an address, while the comma before "and" helps clarify the sentence structure.
The subject noun does not agree with the verb, the noun 'committee' is a singular noun which take the verb for singular: "The committee is...", not "The committee are..."The sentence, "The committee are voting this after noon." does not contain a collective noun.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way. A collective noun is a function of a noun, not a form of a noun.The word 'committee' is often used as a collective noun, but in the example sentence, it is not grouping anyone or anything. Examples of 'committee' as a collective noun:The committee of employees is voting this afternoon.The committee of students is voting this afternoon.Please note that the noun 'afternoon' is a closed compound noun, not an open spaced compound noun.
Use "people who."
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Although some of these might seem quite obvious, here are the four main rules that I can think of: Commas are always used in lists of things. Example: I like to eat chocolate, steak, pavlova, ice cream and chops. Commas are either used in lists (like the above example), or when you are saying a sentence and need to pause or take a breath in the middle of it. Commas always come straight after a word, never a space and then the comma. Example: word, is correct. word , is not correct. This is a fairly new rule that was introduced a few years ago, which a lot of people don't actually use: There is never supposed to be a comma in front of the word 'and', as the word 'and' is supposed to be a pause within itself, although most people do not pay attention to this rule. Example: I like turtles, dogs, horses, dolphins, and cats. -This sentence would not be 'gramatically correct, although at the moment no one pays much attention to this rule. I like turtles, dogs, horses, dolphins and cats. -This is the correct way to write it.
Yes. "I do not like people" is complete and correct, albeit anti-social.
Your perceptive input has just cemented your position on the planning committee.