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Nesbitt-Johnston Writing Center Conferences Tips and Guides Student Writing Prizes |
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The Five Comma Rules That Rule the WorldView in PDF format ![]() 1. Use a comma after an introductory phrase or clause. According to Wilbur, good friends who write well are not easy to find.2. Use commas before and after a parenthetical phrase or clause. Wilbur, E.B. White's famous pig, laments that it is difficult to find a good friend who writes well.3. Use a comma to separate two independent clauses linked by a coordinating conjunction (and, but, for, nor or, so, yet) Charlotte promised Wilbur she will save his life, and she ponders long and hard how to do so.4. Use a comma to separate items in a series. The Other animals in the farmyard, the rat, the geese, and the sheep, are amazed at Charlotte's masterful plan to save Wilbur.5. Use a comma before a quotation when an introductory phrase with a word like say or reply precedes the quotation. Wilbur says, "It's not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer" (White 184).Thanks to Julie-Francoise Kruidenier '02 for the above insights. Works CitedWhite, E.B. Charlotte's Web. New York: HarperCollins Publisher, 1980. |
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