If your sentence can be interpreted in more than one way, consider inserting "that" within the marked group of words to clarify the meaning.
If you want the marked group of words to be one sentence, the marked comma may be unnecessarily separating parts of your ...
If you want the marked group of words to be two separate sentences, replace the comma with a period. If you want the group ...
If you want to check spelling without checking grammar, clear the Check Grammar With Spelling checkbox on the Spelling Grammar ...
If you want to give certain parts of your sentence equal emphasis, construct these parts in a similar fashion. Repetition ...
If your sentence can be interpreted in more than one way, consider inserting "that" within the marked group of words to clarify ...
If your sentence contains a group of words that is not essential to the meaning of your sentence, enclose the entire group ...
If your sentence includes a statement about a question rather than a direct question, the subject should come before the ...
If your sentence includes a statement about a question, rather than a direct question, end your sentence with a period rather ...
If your sentence is modified by a group of words that begins with "which," for clarity, use a comma before "which" to separate ...