" Unless you dislike that flavor, I could get you a strawberry milkshake. "
No, you do not use a comma after "during that time" in a sentence unless separating clauses or adding a pause for clarity or emphasis.
No, unless it's at the beginning of a sentence.
Unless anyone writes a better answer this is all your going to get.
No, a capital "I" is only used when referring to oneself as a pronoun. In the middle of a sentence, "I" should always be in lowercase unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or being used as a proper noun.
Unless it is at the beginning of a sentence, then it is not capitalised.
"Can you use cruel in a sentence?" is a sentence, so yes, unless you mean something else?
Do not jeer unless you can do better yourself
You will not be forgiven unless you apologise now.
Do not deceive me, unless you want respect and honesty in return.
No, not unless you use ER which is short for emergency room.
He cannot pass the exam unless he studies. (Contraction is "can't")
no you should not unless it is at the begging of the sentence!
Unless is a conjunction and therefore can be used at the beginning of a sentence or the middle. However, there are rare cases when it is present at the end.Unless it rains, you can go outside.Wear a jacket unless you will catch a cold.
februari (we don't use capitals for months in the Netherlands, unless at the beginning of a sentence).
Well, it really depends. You can say, she got the apple, but it was rotten. I think that you should, unless the sentence is really short, in which then you shouldn't.
No, you do not use a comma after "during that time" in a sentence unless separating clauses or adding a pause for clarity or emphasis.
The man stated that unless the police had a warrant, they could not take the case to court.