0
Anonymous Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Do I need commas?

Everyday, someone, somewhere is using the internet.
  

Top answer

Hi Anon First of all, you need to write "every day" rather than "everyday". When you write "every day", that refers to frequency. When you write "everyday", that is an adjective which has a meaning similar to "ordinary" or "commonplace".

  • Hi Anon First of all, you need to write "every day" rather than "everyday".
  • When you write "every day", that refers to frequency.
  • When you write "everyday", that is an adjective which has a meaning similar to "ordinary" or "commonplace".
  • You can set off the word "somewhere" with a pair of commas if you like, and I'd suggest using "every day" at the end of your sentence: - Someone, somewhere, is using the Internet every day.
  • )
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Hi Anon

First of all, you need to write "every day" rather than "everyday". When you write "every day", that refers to frequency. When you write "everyday", that is an adjective which has a meaning similar to "ordinary" or "commonplace".

You can set off the word "somewhere" with a pair of commas if you like, and I'd suggest using "every day" at the end of your sentence:

Related Questions