Not usually : "Thank you for listening to me" does not need a comma.
However, if you write their name afterward ("Thanks, Fred."), you need a comma after thank you.
It depends. is it a list
You use a period after it. Here's an example: Martin Luther King Jr.
To print "thank you" in inverted commas in C programming, you can use the following code: #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("\"thank you\"\n"); return 0; } This code will display the output as: "thank you"
v Recommend donor recognition and thank you protocols and development policies, as needed.
Sometimes a comma is needed before a name in a sentence. An example of when to use a comma before a name is, my boyfriend, Carl, went to Yale.
it depends where its at in a sentence
No.
Use a comma where it indicates a pause or change of direction. For example: "I want to thank you teachers for all the work you have done" is different from " I want to thank you, Teachers, for for all the work you have done." Rule of thumb: generally omit the comma unless it really is necessary to avoid confusion.
It depends. is it a list
You use a period after it. Here's an example: Martin Luther King Jr.
To print "thank you" in inverted commas in C programming, you can use the following code: #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("\"thank you\"\n"); return 0; } This code will display the output as: "thank you"
The guests offended their hosts by not saying "thank you."
v Recommend donor recognition and thank you protocols and development policies, as needed.
me
Sometimes a comma is needed before a name in a sentence. An example of when to use a comma before a name is, my boyfriend, Carl, went to Yale.
Yes.Commas are placed before, after, or around a noun or pronoun used independently in speaking to some person, place, or thing:I hope, John, that you will read this.
In Tongan, the word for "good" is " lelei." You can use it in various contexts, such as greeting someone by saying "Mālō" (thank you) or in response to inquiries about how you are doing. For example, you might say "Mālō, lelei au," which means "Thank you, I am good."