No, you don't have to put a comma before at all.
first of all, its spelled coma. and take a coke can and hit the back of your skull with it. takes you out pretty fast.
Example: It was hot, humid, and raining. In the example above, the comma after "humid" is unnecessary but acceptable. The use of the comma before 'and' is called the 'serial comma' or the 'Oxford comma', it's optional. Many people use the serial comma for clarity. The other use of a comma is to break up a long sentence, and signifies a slight pause. Example: He hit the ball, dropped the bat, and ran to first base.
According to international system of numeration, a number is split up into groups. In this system. The first comma placed is after hundreds and then comma is placed after every three digits.
No, I believe that the comma is before the 'or', or I may be mistaken.
No, you don't have to put a comma before at all.
What are all the names of a comma in a number
"Comma" is pronounced as /ˈkɒmə/ with emphasis on the first syllable.
Yes, you should capitalize the first letter after a comma in a sentence.
The comma should be placed after "first" in the sentence: "First, Lizzie sat in the special chair."
comma
use a comma
No, a comma does not go after a name all the time. One puts a comma between a the names in a list. The people that are coming on Wednesday are Mary, John, James, Ingrid and Jo.
Perhaps the most frequent misuse of the comma is the placing of a comma between two independent clauses without a coördinating conjunction. "The sun rose, therefore, light began flooding my bedroom," for example, is a comma splice (a type of run-on sentence) because a comma cannot join the two independent clauses. To fix the problem, the first comma in that sentence could be changed to a semicolon, or the first comma could be changed to a period and the t in thereforecapitalized.
Yes, "all of a sudden" usually requires a comma if it is used at the beginning of a sentence. For example: "All of a sudden, the lights went out."
first of all, its spelled coma. and take a coke can and hit the back of your skull with it. takes you out pretty fast.
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.