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Do we need to add a comma before “as”


A comma before thatComma before adverbialsWhen do we need to include comma after as?Comma usage with “of course”Comma usage with the coordinating conjunction “or”Particular example of comma after butIs it necessary to add a comma before 'too'?Comma Before Participal Phrasedo I place a comma before “well”?Comma before which?













0















I am writing to inform you that I would not able to attend the course from 19 February as my new shift timings match the course timings.










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 6 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 2





    Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 15:07











  • @FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:20







  • 1





    Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

    – remarkl
    Feb 17 at 15:38












  • @remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:44











  • Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 16:03















0















I am writing to inform you that I would not able to attend the course from 19 February as my new shift timings match the course timings.










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 6 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.










  • 2





    Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 15:07











  • @FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:20







  • 1





    Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

    – remarkl
    Feb 17 at 15:38












  • @remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:44











  • Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 16:03













0












0








0








I am writing to inform you that I would not able to attend the course from 19 February as my new shift timings match the course timings.










share|improve this question














I am writing to inform you that I would not able to attend the course from 19 February as my new shift timings match the course timings.







grammaticality commas






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 17 at 14:58









JayanthJayanth

1074




1074





bumped to the homepage by Community 6 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 6 hours ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.









  • 2





    Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 15:07











  • @FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:20







  • 1





    Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

    – remarkl
    Feb 17 at 15:38












  • @remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:44











  • Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 16:03












  • 2





    Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 15:07











  • @FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:20







  • 1





    Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

    – remarkl
    Feb 17 at 15:38












  • @remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 17 at 15:44











  • Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

    – FumbleFingers
    Feb 17 at 16:03







2




2





Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

– FumbleFingers
Feb 17 at 15:07





Strictly speaking you should include the comma, but what marks the text out as "sub-standard" to me isn't that "missing" comma anyway. It's the use of [hypothetical?] would rather than will.

– FumbleFingers
Feb 17 at 15:07













@FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

– Jayanth
Feb 17 at 15:20






@FumbleFingers, thank you.Duly noted. is there a better word for "match" in this scenario...I think match does not fit in.

– Jayanth
Feb 17 at 15:20





1




1





Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

– remarkl
Feb 17 at 15:38






Without the comma, the "as" would be read as "in the role of," e.g., "...attend the course as an auditor." Context rescues the meaning, but context should be a last resort where there is no benefit of brevity to be achieved by relying on it. I think "work schedule conflicts with the course hours" would be more idiomatic than what you have written. And I second FumbleFingers on "will" vs. "would," unless a real possibility exists that the course hours will be changed. In that case, you are telling the prof. why those hours should be changed, rather than why you will not be attending.

– remarkl
Feb 17 at 15:38














@remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

– Jayanth
Feb 17 at 15:44





@remarkl, so you suggest to go for comma before as?

– Jayanth
Feb 17 at 15:44













Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

– FumbleFingers
Feb 17 at 16:03





Personally, I think ...are a good fit with or ...fit in [well] with... would be better than match here. But that's a really fine detail of style - there's nothing particularly wrong with your phrasing there.

– FumbleFingers
Feb 17 at 16:03










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Despite all these comments, no-one has attempted an answer. Since I disagree with most of the comments, I thought I should give this answer. Please note I am a native BrE speaker.



If you wish to be very polite then you might well choose "would" rather than "will". In the context of a student addressing a professor, politeness might be appropriate. The element of doubt implied by "would'" permits a polite withdrawal: the professor might change the timings; you might decide that you could change your other commitments. "Will" could be read as an ultimatum.



There are a few occasions in which the omission of a comma changes the meaning of a sentence. This is not one of them. The modern taste is for minimal commas.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 18 at 4:33










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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









0














Despite all these comments, no-one has attempted an answer. Since I disagree with most of the comments, I thought I should give this answer. Please note I am a native BrE speaker.



If you wish to be very polite then you might well choose "would" rather than "will". In the context of a student addressing a professor, politeness might be appropriate. The element of doubt implied by "would'" permits a polite withdrawal: the professor might change the timings; you might decide that you could change your other commitments. "Will" could be read as an ultimatum.



There are a few occasions in which the omission of a comma changes the meaning of a sentence. This is not one of them. The modern taste is for minimal commas.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 18 at 4:33















0














Despite all these comments, no-one has attempted an answer. Since I disagree with most of the comments, I thought I should give this answer. Please note I am a native BrE speaker.



If you wish to be very polite then you might well choose "would" rather than "will". In the context of a student addressing a professor, politeness might be appropriate. The element of doubt implied by "would'" permits a polite withdrawal: the professor might change the timings; you might decide that you could change your other commitments. "Will" could be read as an ultimatum.



There are a few occasions in which the omission of a comma changes the meaning of a sentence. This is not one of them. The modern taste is for minimal commas.






share|improve this answer























  • Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 18 at 4:33













0












0








0







Despite all these comments, no-one has attempted an answer. Since I disagree with most of the comments, I thought I should give this answer. Please note I am a native BrE speaker.



If you wish to be very polite then you might well choose "would" rather than "will". In the context of a student addressing a professor, politeness might be appropriate. The element of doubt implied by "would'" permits a polite withdrawal: the professor might change the timings; you might decide that you could change your other commitments. "Will" could be read as an ultimatum.



There are a few occasions in which the omission of a comma changes the meaning of a sentence. This is not one of them. The modern taste is for minimal commas.






share|improve this answer













Despite all these comments, no-one has attempted an answer. Since I disagree with most of the comments, I thought I should give this answer. Please note I am a native BrE speaker.



If you wish to be very polite then you might well choose "would" rather than "will". In the context of a student addressing a professor, politeness might be appropriate. The element of doubt implied by "would'" permits a polite withdrawal: the professor might change the timings; you might decide that you could change your other commitments. "Will" could be read as an ultimatum.



There are a few occasions in which the omission of a comma changes the meaning of a sentence. This is not one of them. The modern taste is for minimal commas.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 17 at 23:01









JeremyCJeremyC

2,545313




2,545313












  • Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 18 at 4:33

















  • Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

    – Jayanth
    Feb 18 at 4:33
















Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

– Jayanth
Feb 18 at 4:33





Hi Jeremy, I am giving IELTS in a few days and so I am planning to understand the possibilities of the scenario. From IELTS perspective or strictly speaking, do we have to give a comma in my sentence?

– Jayanth
Feb 18 at 4:33

















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