Not necessarily. Commas show a pause in speech, or separate ideas for clarity. Where there is no pause and no need for clarification a comma is usually unnecessary.
Of course, because if you can multiply a number by 7, it can then be divided by it afterwards as well.
On the list of choices that you posted along with your question, there's no phrase that defines a parallelogram well at all.
well-timed ideas
Well this would depend on what type of adjective phrase you are talking about. There are three different types of adjective phrases:Head-final adjective phrase - This contains an adverb and then an adjectiveHead-initial adjective phrase - This contains an adjective followed by a preposition and a noun.Head-medial adjective phrase - This contains an adverb followed by an adjective, preposition, and then a noun
Do you use commas to off set the phrase as well as
Yes, use commas before and after the phrase "as well as" when it is used to introduce additional information in a sentence. For example: "I enjoy hiking, as well as biking."
ORIGINAL ANSWER: no ** That's not entirely correct. If the "as well as" phrase occurs with a clause at the end of a sentence, do not use a comma. EX: Bob gave a donation to Joe as well as his friend John. If the "as well as" phrase occurs with an interrupting clause in the middle of a sentence, do surround the clause with commas. EX: Bob, as well as his friend John, went to the premiere of the new movie. (As a longtime typist and transcriptionist, I know my commas!)
ORIGINAL ANSWER: no ** That's not entirely correct. If the "as well as" phrase occurs with a clause at the end of a sentence, do not use a comma. EX: Bob gave a donation to Joe as well as his friend John. If the "as well as" phrase occurs with an interrupting clause in the middle of a sentence, do surround the clause with commas. EX: Bob, as well as his friend John, went to the premiere of the new movie. (As a longtime typist and transcriptionist, I know my commas!)
yes you should because as is a preposition and you don`t need it in the senescence.
Commas around "as well as" depend on the context. If it is used to add extra, non-essential information, then commas are used. If it is more integral to the sentence, then commas are not necessary. For example: "I enjoy hiking, as well as biking." vs. "I enjoy hiking as well as running."
either Juan and Mason play well, together. or just no commas
yes you should because as is a preposition and you don`t need it in the senescence.
Sure thing! Commas are used to separate items in a series, to set off introductory phrases or clauses, and to separate independent clauses in a compound sentence. They are also used before coordinating conjunctions that join independent clauses.
Not necessarily. Commas show a pause in speech, or separate ideas for clarity. Where there is no pause and no need for clarification a comma is usually unnecessary.
This statement or sentence is incorrectly written. You have it as:The king as well as the whole of his bodyguards were slain.The subject is the king. You use a singular of the "to be" verb. And you need to put commas in with the phrase that interrupts the original sentence.This is the original sentence.The king was slain.Now you add the phrase.The king, as well as the whole of his bodyguards, was slain.Now remove the phrase and make it a sentence.The WHOLE of the bodyguards was slain. Whole is a singular word too. So the word were would not be used at all.
You do punctuate 3 or more consecutive direct quotes with quotation marks AND commas. I am an English scholar, so believe me when I say this! LMJ