Does the comma go before the conjunction

A comma is a punctuation mark that indicates a slight pause between different parts of a sentence. In writing, it helps readers differentiate the clauses.  There are many guidelines to keep in mind when deciding whether to use a comma. Below, we’ll focus and elaborate on when to use a comma before the conjunction and.

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A playful parody that includes one of our favorite punctuations—commas.

When To Use a Comma Before “And”

A conjunction is a word that connects words, phrases, and clauses to each other. And is a type of coordinating conjunction (along with for, nor, but, or, yet, and so). Another term you should be familiar with to understand when you should (or shouldn’t) use a comma before and is independent clauses. These are clauses that can stand on their own as grammatically complete sentences. When the conjunction and connects two independent clauses, then a comma is required. For example:

Isaac went to the supermarket to buy food, and then he passed by his dad’s house to have dinner.

In the example above, the two clauses that can stand on their own are:

  1. Isaac went to the supermarket to buy food.
  2. Then he passed by his dad’s house to have dinner.

Because they can stand on their own as complete sentences, a comma should be placed before the conjunction and. Here’s another example:

Shawna had to drive all the way back to her house, and Geoffrey had to drop off her cat at the vet.

Shawna had to drive all the way back to her house and Geoffrey had to drop off her cat at the vet.

However, if two independent clauses are short and closely related, then a comma before and isn’t needed. It’s a stylistic choice that’s left up to the writer.

I swept and Thomas mopped.

I swept, and Thomas mopped.

But if and connects an independent clause to a dependent clause, then you shouldn’t add a comma.

My hamster is cute and eats a lot.

My hamster is cute, and eats a lot.


How About Commas Before “And” in Lists?

There are two schools of thought when it comes to using a comma before and in a list: you either love them or hate them. This comma is known as the Oxford, Harvard, or serial comma.

Here’s an example of an Oxford comma before and:

Eduard enjoyed reading about biology, astronomy, and chemistry.

And here is the same sentence without the comma before and:

Eduard enjoyed reading about biology, astronomy and chemistry.

Different publications have their own guidelines when it comes to whether a comma has to precede the conjunction and. If you’re not sure, just ask. If you’re writing for yourself, stay consistent; pick a style and stick with it.

It’s important to note that a list with only two items (or any other type of words) does not require a comma.

She ate pasta and garlic rolls.

She ate pasta, and garlic rolls.


LanguageTool and Commas: A Match Made in Heaven

Commas significantly improve the flow of your writing. The rules mentioned above are just some of the many to remember. If you want to make sure you are always using commas correctly, try out LanguageTool. As a writing assistant, LanguageTool detects missing commas and suggests where you can add them. As if that weren’t helpful enough, this text editor can also correct spelling mistakes and grammar errors in more than twenty languages!

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Contrary to popular belief, commas don't just signify pauses in a sentence.

In fact, precise rules govern when to use this punctuation mark. When followed, they lay the groundwork for clear written communication.

We've compiled a list of all the times when you'll need the mighty comma — and we wrote sentences about ducks to show you their proper use:

Rebecca Aydin and Christina Sterbenz contributed to a previous version of this post.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

You may need to learn a few grammatical terms to understand this one.

An independent clause is a unit of grammatical organization that includes both a subject and verb and can stand on its own as a sentence. In the previous example, "I went running" and "I saw a duck" are both independent clauses, and "and" is the coordinating conjunction that connects them. Consequently, we insert a comma.

If we were to eliminate the second "I" from that example, the second clause would lack a subject, making it not a clause at all. In that case, it would no longer need a comma: "I went running and saw a duck."

2. Use a comma after a dependent clause that starts a sentence.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

A dependent clause is a grammatical unit that contains both subject and verb but cannot stand on its own, like "When I went running ..."

Commas always follow these clauses at the start of a sentence. If a dependent clause ends the sentence, however, it no longer requires a comma. Only use a comma to separate a dependent clause at the end of a sentence for added emphasis, usually when negation occurs.

3. Use commas to offset appositives from the rest of the sentence.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Appositives act as synonyms for a juxtaposed word or phrase. In the above example — "While running, I saw a mallard, a kind of duck" — "A kind of duck" is the appositive, which gives more information about "a mallard."

If the appositive occurs in the middle of the sentence, both sides of the phrase need a comma. As in: "A mallard, a kind of duck, attacked me."

Don't let the length of an appositive scare you. As long as the phrase somehow gives more information about its predecessor, you usually need a comma.

"A mallard, the kind of duck I saw when I went running, attacked me."

There's one exception to this rule. Don't offset a phrase that gives necessary information to the sentence. Usually, commas surround a non-essential clause or phrase. For example, "The duck that attacked me scared my friend" doesn't require any commas. Even though the phrase "that attacked me" describes "the duck," it provides essential information to the sentence. Otherwise, no one would know why the duck scared your friend. Clauses that begin with "that" are usually essential to the sentence and do not require commas.

4. Use commas to separate items in a series.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

That last comma, known as the serial comma, Oxford comma, or Harvard comma, causes serious controversy. Although many consider it unnecessary, others (including Business Insider) insist on its use to reduce ambiguity.

There's an Internet meme that demonstrates its necessity perfectly. The sentence, "We invited the strippers, JFK, and Stalin," means the speaker sent three separate invitations: one to some strippers, one to JFK, and one to Stalin. The version without the Oxford comma, however, takes on an entirely different meaning, potentially suggesting that only one invitation was sent — to two strippers named JFK and Stalin. Witness: "We invited the strippers, JFK and Stalin."

Read more: 12 everyday phrases that you're probably saying incorrectly

5. Use a comma after introductory adverbs.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Another example: "Finally, I went running."

Many adverbs end in "ly" and answer the question "how?" How did someone do something? How did something happen? Adverbs that don't end in "ly," such as "when" or "while," usually introduce a dependent clause, which rule number two in this post already covered.

Also insert a comma when "however" starts a sentence, too. Phrases like "on the other hand" and "furthermore" also fall into this category.

Starting a sentence with "however," however, is discouraged by many careful writers. A better method would be to use "however" within a sentence after the phrase you want to negate, as in the previous sentence.

6. Use a comma when attributing quotes.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

The rule for where the comma goes, however, depends on where attribution comes.

If attribution comes before the quote, place the comma outside the quotations marks:

The runner said, "I saw a duck."

If attribution comes after the quote, put the comma inside the quotation marks:

"I saw a duck," said the runner.

7. Use a comma to separate each element in an address. Also use a comma after a city-state combination within a sentence.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Another example: "Cleveland, Ohio, is a great city."

8. Use a comma to separate the elements in a full date (weekday, month and day, and year). Also separate a combination of those elements from the rest of the sentence with commas.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Even if you add a weekday, keep the comma after "2013":

Friday, March 15, 2013, was the day I saw the duck.

Friday, March 15, was the day I say the duck.

You don't need to add a comma when the sentence mentions only the month and year:

March 2013 was a strange month.

Read more: 11 reasons the English language is impossible to learn

9. Use a comma when the first word of the sentence is a freestanding "yes" or "no."

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Another example: "Yes, I saw a duck when I went running."

 

10. Use a comma when directly addressing someone or something in a sentence.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Another clever meme shows the problem with incorrect placement of this comma. "Stop clubbing baby seals" reads like an order to desist harming infant mammals of the seal variety. The version with a comma, however, instructs them to stop attending hip dance clubs. "Stop clubbing, baby seals." (Or rather, to stay on theme: "Stop clubbing, baby ducks.")

11. Use a comma between two adjectives that modify the same noun.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

Only coordinate adjectives require a comma between them. Two adjectives are coordinate if you can answer yes to both of these questions: 1. Does the sentence still make sense if you reverse the order of the words? 2. Does the sentence still make sense if you insert "and" between the words?

Since "I saw the mean, big duck " and "I saw the big and mean duck" both sound fine, you need the comma.

Sentences with non-coordinate adjectives, however, don't require a comma. For example, "I lay under the powerful summer sun." "Powerful" describes "summer sun" as a whole phrase. This often occurs with adjunct nouns, a phrase where a noun acts as an adjective describing another noun — like "chicken soup" or "dance club."

12. Use a comma to offset negation in a sentence.

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

In this case, you still need the comma if the negation occurs at the end of the sentence:

"I saw a baby seal, not a duck."

Also use commas when any distinct shift occurs in the sentence or thought process:

"The cloud looked like an animal, perhaps a baby seal."

Read more: 9 ways to become a better speller, according to an expert

13. Use commas before every sequence of three numbers when writing a number larger than 999. (Two exceptions are writing years and house numbers.)

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

14. Use commas to demarcate an incomplete quote, or to create dramatic effect.

Juliana Kaplan/Business Insider

If you're trying to indicate a natural pause or inject your dialogue with some dramatic effect, commas can be your friend. Put whatever comes first in quotes, end that quote with a comma, and then end the attribution with a comma. This creates the grammatical equivalent of someone pausing while speaking — the commas make you stop at each clause, but let you know that the sentence is still flowing.

"But wait," the Business Insider reporter wrote, "there's more ways to use commas."

15. Use commas for important clarification.

Juliana Kaplan/Business Insider

In the above sentence, a comma tells you that Scrooge and the extended McDuck clan are to jump in a pot of money. Without the comma, it would seem that multiple Scrooges were raking in the coins.

16. Beware of putting a comma before "but" every single time. It should only be used when connecting two independent clauses (despite what your middle school teacher told you).

Juliana Kaplan/Business Insider

As you may recall from above, an independent clause has a subject and a verb and can stand on its own as a sentence. Often, a coordinating conjunction will connect two independent clauses — like the word "but."

But — and it's a big but — your middle school teacher may have told you to always throw a comma before "but." Don't do that! You should only put a comma before "but" when connecting two independent clauses.

For example, this usage of "but" does not take a comma:

"To quack but to have no one hear is a sad thing for a duck."

17. Beware of the comma splice

Rebecca Aydin/Business Insider

As fun as it may be to say, the comma "splice" should be avoided. A comma splice incorrectly joins two independent clauses, like: 

"I went running, I saw a duck."

That sentence contains a comma splice, and therefore it is incorrect. The two independent clauses "I went running" and "I saw a duck" could instead be separated by a period.

Read more: 9 words and phrases people think are wrong, but are actually correct

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Should you use a comma before a conjunction?

When a coordinating conjunction joins two independent clauses, a comma is used before the coordinating conjunction (unless the two independent clauses are very short). Conjunctions that are not followed by non-essential elements should never be followed by commas.

How do you use commas and conjunctions in a sentence?

Use commas to separate independent clauses when they are joined by any of these seven coordinating conjunctions: and, but, for, or, nor, so, yet. The game was over, but the crowd refused to leave. The student explained her question, yet the instructor still didn't seem to understand.

Do you put a comma after a conjunction at the beginning of a sentence?

When beginning a sentence with so (or any other conjunction), most grammar resources state that you don't need to put a comma after so. However, if so is followed by an interrupting phrase, it would be followed by one of the two commas used to set the phrase apart from the main sentence.

What comes before a conjunction in a sentence?

The most frequently used are and, or, nor, so, but, for, and yet. When a coordinating conjunction is used to join two independent clauses, you should use a comma before the coordinating conjunction. An independent clause contains a subject and a verb and could stand alone as a sentence.