Not necessarily. Commas are a feature of sentence structure.
A thousand millions = a billion in Australia.
Oh, dude, you write Twelve Million Twelve Thousand Twelve as 12,012,012. Easy peasy lemon squeezy. Like, just throw in some commas every three digits starting from the right, and you're good to go. Math and stuff, you know?
well first you want to go get something to write with and something to drink that you dont get to focused on your math hw! and then you get a calcualtor and then punch in some number and then idk the rest! lol good luck trying to figure out the answer!
Starting from the right, you place a comma after every 3 digits. Thus, it would read 127,992.
commas go after question marks
No, I have not visited Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Commas should go after "visited" and "Pennsylvania" in the sentence.
37251285 = 37,251,285
10,000,000
No, commas do not typically go before "considering" when it is used in the middle of a sentence. However, if "considering" is at the beginning of a sentence, a comma may be used after it.
word art
Commas typically go after "therefore" when it is used to introduce a dependent clause. For example, "He did not study for the exam, therefore, he did not pass."
The correct placement of commas would be: "Do you go to school, Shaina?" The comma is placed after "school" and before the name "Shaina" to create a pause between the question and the person being addressed.
go do something else
Not necessarily. Commas are a feature of sentence structure.
Go to someone's profile, and write your comment in the box that says 'write something.' Then click "share."
British style places commas and periods that are not part of the quoted material outside of the quotation marks. Also, in technical applications or when discussing coding, punctuation that is not part of a text string should be placed outside of the quotes. Placing commas and periods inside the quotes implies that they are part of the string to be displayed.