Question
Which statement explains when a comma should be used with a subordinating conjunction? (1 poin
• The comma should follow the dependent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
• The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the independent clause begins the sentence.
• The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
• The comma should follow the independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
• The comma should follow the dependent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
• The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the independent clause begins the sentence.
• The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
• The comma should follow the independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct statement is: **The comma should follow the independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.**
In general, when a dependent clause (introduced by a subordinating conjunction) comes before an independent clause, a comma is used after the dependent clause. However, when the independent clause comes first, no comma is needed.
In general, when a dependent clause (introduced by a subordinating conjunction) comes before an independent clause, a comma is used after the dependent clause. However, when the independent clause comes first, no comma is needed.
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