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On many community college campuses(A) women(B) who are returning to college(C) choose to join the organization Women in Transition.

2007-09-13 06:14:27 · 9 answers · asked by A to the T 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

9 answers

In using a comma, think about where you would normally pause if you were speaking the sentence. In your instance a comma is not necessary, but if you insert a comma, put it after "campuses"--choice A. However, speak this sentence and you'll see no comma is necessary.

2007-09-13 06:24:22 · answer #1 · answered by David M 7 · 1 0

It should be written like this:

On many community college campuses, women who are returning to college choose to join the organization called Women in Transition.

2007-09-13 06:23:20 · answer #2 · answered by 'Sunnyside Up' 7 · 0 1

I think a comma is required at A because it is a prepositional phrase with more than three words. However, I'm a scientist, so I hope someone else can corraborate this.

2007-09-13 06:22:16 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

if you want to you can put a comma at A. In reality, no comma needs to be inserted in the sentence

2007-09-13 06:20:51 · answer #4 · answered by don't plagiarize 7 · 0 0

A .... that's where the "transition" is... you need to "pause" there bc at that point you've established what you're talking about, then there's an elaboration ... like what I just did <--- see?

2007-09-13 06:22:42 · answer #5 · answered by Impavidsoul 5 · 0 1

A

2007-09-13 06:23:25 · answer #6 · answered by supergirl3009 1 · 0 1

A

2007-09-13 06:18:50 · answer #7 · answered by copeseticnomos 2 · 1 1

You know.

2007-09-13 06:27:11 · answer #8 · answered by jamoca 7 · 0 1

(A)..dat's d'comma suppose 2b

2007-09-13 06:19:23 · answer #9 · answered by essaminstein-ER 1 · 0 1

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