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Air modern 361 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Comma Usage

I'm trying to determine which is correct. Please help!


On a different day, Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away, but not today!

On a different day, Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away but not today!

On a different day Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away, but not today!

On a different day Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away but not today!

  

Top answer

On a different day, Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away but not today! Put a comma before "but" when it is used to create a compound sentence, which is two independent clauses joined by one of the following: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, OR so .

  • On a different day, Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away but not today!
  • Put a comma before "but" when it is used to create a compound sentence, which is two independent clauses joined by one of the following: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, OR so .
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2 Answers
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On a different day, Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away but not today!

Put a comma before "but" when it is used to create a compound sentence, which is two independent clauses joined by one of the following: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, OR so.

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Sometimes there are as many "correct" ways to punctuate as there are writers. Here's one that I like:

On a different day Aniyah might’ve kept quiet and shied away — but not today!

This appears to be from a piece of creative writing, and the rules for punctuation are often more relaxed in that world. Unless you are preparing a manuscript for publication, use your own judgmen

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