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Iris
When do I need to put a comma when despite/inspite of comes first?
Despite the pain in his leg he completed the marathon.
Despite having all the necessary qualifications, they didn’t offer me the job.
http://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/fr/comment/71547
Why is there no comma in the first sentence?
12 de set de 2015 22:22
Respostas · 6
1
Iris, hello. Please look at this link, and especially at paragraph 3. And at the end of paragraph 3, please click on the link labeled "HERE" for even more information.
http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/commas.htm
13 de setembro de 2015
1
It seems to me that comma usage in English is like the meaning of life...ask a different person and you'll get a different answer. I think you most definitely need a comma between the words 'leg' and 'he'. The way I come to this conclusion, along with any similar sentence is to say the two words one after another without a pause. If 'leg' and 'he' are pronounced one after another without a very 'hard' pause, it sounds like gibberish to me. If I hear gibberish, I conclude that a comma must be used.
13 de setembro de 2015
1
Punctuation is partly a matter of style, and educated native English speakers argue about it.
I believe that in the first sentence a comma is optional, and I personally would put it in. I believe these are both correct:
Despite the pain in his leg he completed the marathon.
Despite the pain in his leg, he completed the marathon.
I will be curious to hear what others say.
13 de setembro de 2015
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Iris
Habilidades linguísticas
Inglês, Russo
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês
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