- In a compound sentence without a conjunction
- Before a dependent clause
- In short phrases
- In subject-verb agreement
No category found.
- She is tired; nevertheless, she works.
- She is tired; she works; nevertheless.
- She is tired; but she works.
- She is tired; and she works.
- I have friends in Spain; France and Italy.
- I have friends in Spain, France, and Italy.
- I have friends; in Spain, France, and Italy.
- I have friends in Spain France and Italy.
- Period
- Comma
- Dash
- Colon
- I studied hard; I failed.
- I studied hard; however, I failed.
- I studied hard; and I failed.
- I studied hard. However, I failed.
- The winners were Tom; age 12; Sara; age 14; and Mia.
- The winners: Tom, 12; Sara, 14; Mia.
- The winners were Tom, age 12; Sara, age 14; and Mia.
- Tom (12); Sara (14); Mia (15).
- The sun is hot; wear sunscreen.
- The sun is hot wear sunscreen.
- The sun; is hot, wear sunscreen.
- The sun is hot, wear sunscreen.
- Replace semicolon with comma
- Remove ?but?
- Add colon instead
- Correct as is
- but
- however
- and
- since
- For example
- However
- In fact
- All of these
- I love cats; dogs are fine too.
- I love cats; because they are soft.
- He slept late; he missed the bus.
- The show ended; the crowd clapped.
- I like apples; oranges, and bananas.
- I like apples; oranges and; bananas.
- I like apples, oranges, and bananas.
- I like; apples, oranges, and bananas.
- She was angry; she shouted loudly.
- The team won; however, they were tired.
- Because it rained; we canceled the trip.
- He tried hard; he succeeded.
- With 3 or more words
- With numbers
- With internal commas
- With single-word items
- Instead of periods
- To join unrelated clauses
- After subordinating conjunctions
- In place of a comma in simple lists
- She brought pens; notebooks; and highlighters.
- She brought pens, notebooks; and highlighters.
- She brought pens, notebooks, and highlighters.
- She brought pens; and notebooks and highlighters.
- Between long complex list items
- Before a list after a complete sentence
- To link related independent clauses
- Before a conjunctive adverb
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