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RoshaBeli Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Help me with the Punctuation rule

  1. Mr. and Mrs. Jones are very wealthy; however, they still live a simple life.

  2. Each student learns in a different way. The teacher, therefore, must include activities that cater to various learning activities.

Can anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas (and not with a semicolon comma as in the first sentence). I know the rule that applies to the 1st sentence, but I am a bit confused about the 2nd case. Is it only because Therefore is an interrupting clause?

Also, I am not sure how the phrase cater to, or cater is being used.

Thanks in advance! Emotion: smile

  

Top answer

RoshaBeli Can anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas A comma is only needed if "therefore" comes first, as "however" did, "Therefore, the teacher must include activities …". The writer can choose to make "therefore" parenthetical, as in your example, but there is no need. Additionally, I would move "therefore", "The teacher must therefore include activities …".

  • RoshaBeli Can anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas A comma is only needed if "therefore" comes first, as "however" did, "Therefore, the teacher must include activities …".
  • The writer can choose to make "therefore" parenthetical, as in your example, but there is no need.
  • Additionally, I would move "therefore", "The teacher must therefore include activities …".
  • RoshaBeli and not with a semicolon comma as in the first sentence You could do it that way, "Each student learns in a different way; therefore, the teacher must include activities …", but that is inferior with either adverb.
  • The semicolon is a Band-aid fix, and the reader knows it.
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3 Answers
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RoshaBeliCan anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas

A comma is only needed if "therefore" comes first, as "however" did, "Therefore, the teacher must include activities …". The writer can choose to make "therefore" parenthetical, as in your example, but there is no need. Additionally, I would move "therefore", "The teacher

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RoshaBeliCan anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas (and not with a semicolon comma as in the first sentence).

It's a less rigorous, less academic way of constructing the sentence. You can do both sentences both ways.

Mr. and Mrs. Jones are very wealthy; however, they still live a simple life.
Each stud

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  1. Mr. and Mrs. Jones are very wealthy; however, they still live a simple life.

  2. Each student learns in a different way. The teacher, therefore, must include activities that cater to various learning activities.

Can anybody tell me what is the logic behind enclosing therefore with commas (and not with a semicolon comma as in the first sentence). I know the r

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