Expert Book Publishing Blog
Over the years, I’ve seen manuscripts and college assignments riddled with commas and I’ve seen them without even the basic commas. When I asked one student what rules he used for inserting commas in his writing, he said, “I put a comma everywhere I pause to take a breath when reading.”
What? Is that in an English textbook somewhere?
It is just a bad to have too many commas as it is to have too few, so check your own writing against these basic comma rules.
Use a comma after an introductory clause. (Example: If you are looking for a job, try the Internet.)
Use a comma before the conjunction that joins two independent clauses (independent clauses could stand alone as two sentences without the conjunction joining them). (Example: Job candidates should match their skills to the position, and they should know something about the target company.)
Use a comma…
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Published on June 03, 2012 11:52