Stop trying to obfuscate the issue!
No, you do not always need to put a comma after the word "so" if it is the first word in a sentence. It depends on the context and flow of the sentence.
The meaning of the word obfuscate: obscure, unclear, unintelligible, confuse, difficult to understand. For instance, to complicate something and make it less clear.
She put on a friendly guise to hide her true intentions.
Typically, a comma is not used immediately after "though" in a sentence. However, if "though" is used as a conjunction at the beginning of a sentence to introduce a contrasting idea, a comma may be used after it.
This sentence does not contain a transitive verb so it cannot be put into the passice.
Here is an example:Please do not obfuscate the truth.
There is a fine line between abstraction and obfuscation.
A 'sentence' can mean two things: 1. A discrete collection of words or utterances relating to the same subject. 2. A legal punishment. Since I know of no standard legal sentence containing the word 'obfuscate', I assume your question relates to the former definition. Therefore, the answer would be: 'A discrete collection of words relating to the word 'obfuscate'.' Hope that helps.
you can put she was so prehistoric that she was deadly!
Obfuscate is when you purposely obscure, hinder or make something hard to understand. It is also when you attempt to bewilder.
You are so meagre!
muddy, obfuscate
No, you do not always need to put a comma after the word "so" if it is the first word in a sentence. It depends on the context and flow of the sentence.
you put lives into a sentence like this. for example:Sophie lives in Pennsylvania. so basically before a Pronoun
my mum is so sympathetic
The aggravation is so unnecessary.
Obfuscate.