In a list of items you do not put a comma. However if you use it as a coordinating conjunction you do.
Example: I ate Oranges, apples, and bananas this week.
Yo comí naranjas, manzanas y bananas esta semana.
Martha carried all the light packages, and Sam carried all the heavy ones.
Martha cargo todos los paquetes livianos, y Sam cargo todo los pesados.
In Spanish, the number 67.911 would be written as "sesenta y siete coma nueve uno uno." This follows the standard Spanish convention of using "coma" (comma) to represent the decimal point. The numbers are then read individually, with "nueve" representing the decimal point and each subsequent digit pronounced separately.
In Spanish, "and" is translated as "y".
sesenta y siete punto nueve uno unoIt basically means 'sixty seven point nine one one'
And.
A close approximation to "What about you?" in Spanish might be "¿Y usted?" literally, "And you?" Or, "¿y tu?" in an informal setting.
In Spanish, the number 45.969 is written as "cuarenta y cinco mil novecientos sesenta y nueve." When writing out numbers in Spanish, it's important to note that the decimal point is typically replaced with a comma, so it would appear as "45,969."
Yes, the Oxford comma is used in Spanish grammar to separate items in a list.
The comma goes after.
you do not have to put the comma there
Comma after what?
Do not put a space before a comma. Put one space afterthe comma.
You ussualy put a comma before the conjuction. On rare evernts you put the comma after.
No.
No.
No, you do not need to put a comma after "To begin with" when it is used as an introductory phrase in a sentence.
Put one space after a comma.
The decimal point is usually written as a comma, in Spanish-speaking countries. In that case, you would read this number as "ciento cincuenta y uno coma ocho".