How To Use Commas - English Writing Lesson

259,556 views ・ 2015-04-20

Oxford Online English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hello, I'm Oli.
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Welcome to Oxford Online English.
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In this lesson, you can learn about using commas.
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Students often seem very confused about commas and how to use them correctly.
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Commas are quite complicated, because they don't just do one thing.
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Actually, commas have many different jobs in the sentence.
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So in this lesson, I'll explain the different types of comma, what they do and how you can
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use them.
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Let's start with our first type of comma: the listing comma.
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As the name suggests, the listing comma is used to list items or ideas one after another.
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For example: "We need two cucumbers, four tomatoes, some onions and a lettuce."
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We use commas to separate the items on the list.
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Before the word 'and' in British English, we don't usually use a comma.
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In American English, a comma is often used before 'and'.
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It's your choice which style you use.
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Both are correct.
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This comma - the listing comma - replaces the words 'and' or 'or'.
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You could say: "We need two cucumbers and four tomatoes and some onions and a lettuce."
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It's not wrong, but it doesn't sound good, so it's better to use the commas.
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Your list could include phrases, or even complete sentences.
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The principle is the same.
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For example: "We spent our time relaxing on the beach, swimming in the sea and drinking
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coffee in the seaside cafés."
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In this case, the items on our list are whole phrases; they're not just single words, but
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the principle is the same.
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We use a comma after each item, and in British English, not before the word 'and'.
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You can also use the listing comma - sometimes- to separate adjectives before a noun.
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Look at two sentences: "She has long, dark, shiny hair."
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"He bought a bottle of dark, German beer."
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In the first sentence, we use listing commas to separate the adjectives.
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In the second sentence, we don't.
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Can you see why?
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Well, remember we said that the listing comma replaces the words 'and' or 'or'.
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You can say: "She has long and dark and shiny hair."
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It doesn't sound good, but it's possible.
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so in this case we use listing commas between the adjectives.
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But you cannot say: "He bought a bottle of dark and German beer."
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It's not possible, so in this case we don't use listing commas.
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If you're not sure, you can use this trick: try replacing the commas with the word 'and'.
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If it sounds OK, then you need commas.
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If it doesn't sound right, you don't need commas.
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OK, what's our second comma?
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It's the joining comma!
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The joining comma is used to join two complete sentences, together with a linking word.
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For example: "We were tired, and we really didn't feel like going anywhere."
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In this sentence, each half of the sentence could stand by itself.
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"We were tired," is a complete sentence, and "We really didn't feel like going anywhere,"
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is also a complete sentence.
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So we can put the two sentences together with a comma and the linking word 'and'.
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Other linking words you can use in this way include 'and', 'but', 'or' or 'although'.
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There are many others as well; that's not a complete list.
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However, you do need to be careful with these commas; you can't use a comma to join two
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complete sentences without using a linking word.
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You also can't use joining commas with some linking words.
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Let's practise: look at some sentences and see if they're right or wrong.
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Here are the four sentences.
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Read them, pause the video and think about your answer - which are correct and which
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are not correct in terms of comma use?
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OK, ready?
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Let's look at the answers.
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(1) and (4) are correct.
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(2) and (3) are not correct.
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Let's see why.
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Sentence two: "I applied for the job, I really hope I get it," is not correct because there's
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no linking word between the sentences.
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You could say: "I applied for the job, and I really hope I get it."
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You could also say: "I applied for the job."
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- full stop - "I really hope I get it."
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But you can't use a comma to join two full sentences like this.
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In the second sentence: "She didn't get the grades she needed, however she got into the
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university in any case."
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We use the linking word 'however', but we don't use commas with 'however'.
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The best way to link these sentences is with a full stop, so we put a full stop after the
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word 'needed', and then start a new sentence with 'however'.
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You might be thinking that number four is wrong because the second part of the sentence
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isn't a full sentence.
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That's true, but the important point is that it could be a full sentence.
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You could say: "You'll either have to start again, or you'll have to find someone to help
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you."
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We shorten the sentence to make it simpler and easier to say, so it's OK to use the joining
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comma here.
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Number three is the bracketing comma.
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This is possibly the most difficult comma to use.
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It's used to add an extra phrase or piece of information into a sentence.
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It's often used in pairs.
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For example: "This book, first published in 1956, is still useful for students today."
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The phrase in red is extra information about the book, and so we put it between a pair
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of commas.
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"One of my colleagues, who used to be a semi-professional footballer, invited me to play in their five-a-side
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team this weekend."
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Again, the information in red is extra information about my colleague, and so the information
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goes between a pair of commas.To use bracketing commas, the sentence must make sense and be
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grammatically complete without the extra information.
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In these cases you can see that if we remove the information in red: "This book is still
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useful for students today" - that's still a complete sentence and it makes sense.
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Also, if I say: "One of my colleagues invited me to play in their five-a-side team this
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weekend," again, that's a full sentence; it's grammatically correct; it's clear - we don't
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need the information between the bracketing commas for the sentence to make sense.
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In both cases, the sentence is complete and the meaning is clear without the extra information.
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This makes it easy to see if your commas are correct or not.
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If you're using commas in this way, ask yourself whether the sentence would make sense without
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the phrase between commas.
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If not, something is wrong.
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For example: "He was a strict, and sometimes cruel leader, who was feared by his staff."
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This might look OK, but if we try to remove the red text between commas, we get: "He was
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a strict who was feared by his staff."
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This doesn't make sense.
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He was a strict what?
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Another example: "Pens, which can write upside-down, are used by NASA astronauts on the International
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Space Station."
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Again, it looks OK, but if we remove the red text - the extra information - we get: "Pens
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are used by NASA astronauts on the International Space Station."
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Now this is a clear sentence and it's grammatically correct, but it has a different meaning.
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We didn't want to say that just any pens are used.
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We wanted to say that a special kind of pen is used, so we've changed the meaning of the
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sentence.
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If the extra phrase is near the beginning or the end of a sentence, you might just use
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one bracketing comma instead of using a pair.
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Let's look: "Similar to most people his age, he isn't really thinking about his future."
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Again, the text in red is extra information, but it comes at the beginning of the sentence.
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That means we don't need two commas; we can just use one.
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"He told me that he wanted to quit and become a painter, which surprised me."
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Again, it's extra information, but it's at the end of the sentence, so we just use one
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comma and then a full stop.
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Finally, let's look at some common mistakes with commas.
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There are three mistakes which I see students making a lot.
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Let's look so you can hopefully avoid making these mistakes.
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Don't put a comma between a subject and its verb.
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For example, this sentence is incorrect, because 'The people we met on holiday' is the subject;
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'were' is the main verb.
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There should not be a comma between the subject and the main verb.
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In this sentence, we have the same problem.
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The subject, again, is not one word; it's a phrase: 'Everything in those cupboards'.
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The main verb is 'needs', so again, there should not be a comma between the subject
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and the main verb.
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Don't use a comma before 'that'.
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This is a useful rule, because it's quite easy.
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"She told me, that she wanted to move to London," or: "I had no idea, that he could speak Japanese."
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In both of these sentences there should not be a comma before 'that'.
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Don't use a comma to join two sentences if you don't use a linking word.
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In this case, both parts of the sentence before and after the comma could be full sentences
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by themselves.
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So in this case, you either need to use a linking word, like 'and' or ' but' or 'or'
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or something like that, or you need to use a full stop after 'year'.
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You can't use a comma like this.
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Here, we have the same problem.
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We have two ideas.
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Each idea could be a sentence by itself, and there's no linking word, so we can't use a
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comma to join two complete sentences like this without a linking word.
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OK, that's the end of the lesson.
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I hope it was useful.
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If you want to see the full lesson, which includes the text, so you can read everything,
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and also a quiz to help you practise and test your comma skill, come to our website: www.oxfordonlineenglish.com.
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There are also many other free English lessons there.
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But that's all.
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Thanks again for watching, and I'll see you next time.
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Bye bye!
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