Asked by Jaz
Which statement explains when a comma should be used with a subordinating conjunction?(1 point)
Responses
The comma should follow the dependent 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 independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
The comma should follow the independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the independent clause begins the sentence.
Responses
The comma should follow the dependent 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 independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
The comma should follow the independent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the dependent clause begins the sentence.
The comma should follow the subordinating conjunction if the independent clause begins the sentence.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct statement is:
**The comma should follow the dependent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.**
This means that if the dependent clause (which starts with a subordinating conjunction) comes before the independent clause in a sentence, you should use a comma to separate them. For example: "If it rains, we will cancel the picnic."
**The comma should follow the dependent clause if the clause begins with a subordinating conjunction.**
This means that if the dependent clause (which starts with a subordinating conjunction) comes before the independent clause in a sentence, you should use a comma to separate them. For example: "If it rains, we will cancel the picnic."
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