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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Do I need a come before the word 'include' ?

False names that students have used when substitute teachers were in class, include Sandy Beech, Frank Furter, and Ben Dover.
  

Top answer

The information your adjective clause gives is important, so you don't need a comma. If it wasn't, you'd need two commas: one before the adjective clause and one after. Ex: The students' last names, whose meanings are sometimes funny to me, are on the blackboard.

  • The information your adjective clause gives is important, so you don't need a comma.
  • If it wasn't, you'd need two commas: one before the adjective clause and one after.
  • Ex: The students' last names, whose meanings are sometimes funny to me, are on the blackboard.
  • "
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1 Answers
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The information your adjective clause gives is important, so you don't need a comma. If it wasn't, you'd need two commas: one before the adjective clause and one after.

Ex: The students' last names, whose meanings are sometimes funny to me, are on the blackboard.

For more info, search for "Commas with adjective clauses."

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