爱游戏合营计划,爱游戏好用吗Search this siteSkip to main contentSkip to navigationConventions of CompositionHomeRule 1Rule 2Rule 3Rule 4Rule 5Rule 8Rule 9Rule 11Rule 16Rule 22Rule 23Rule 24Rule 25Rule 26Rule 28Rule 37Rule 41Rule 57Rule 75Rule 76Rule 77Rule 82Rule 83Rule 100Rule 106Rule 123Rule 124Rule 125Rule 130Rule 131Rule 133Rule 135Rule 137Rule 140Rule 148Rule 149Rule 150Rule 151Rule 152Rule 154Rule 155Rule 162Rule 169Rule 170Rule 177Rule 178Rule 179Rule 188Rule 189Rule 200Rule 201Rule 202Rule 203Rule 204Rule 205Rule 206Rule 207Rule 208Rule 209Rule 210Rule 211Rule 212Rule 213Rule 214Rule 215Rule 216Rule 217Rule 218Rule 219Rule 220Rule 221Rule 222Conventions of CompositionConventions of Composition Rule 28Rule: If an nonrestrictive (unnecessary to the meaning of the sentence) appositive has more than one word, separate it from the rest of the sentence with a pair of commas. If an appositive is restrictive (necessary for telling which particular person or thing or which kind of person or thing) or one word, you need not separate it with commas.Examples:Correct: George Washington, our first president, died in 1799.Correct: In Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar the hero is Brutus.Correct: The Civil War began in the year 1861.Practice deciding if or where these appositives need commas around them:My brother Humperdinck might rule the all of Florin someday.Her car the Ford F-150 with huge tires is in the shop.Preps find taking the four Grammar Gateways best four classes of the year both challenging and enjoyable.Resources for further explanation of punctuating appositives:Purdue OWL&#39;s AppositivesGrammar Book&#39;s Commas with AppositivesGrammarly&#39;s Commas< Previous RulePractice AnswersNext Rule >Report abuseReport abuse爱游戏合营计划,爱游戏好用吗