As well as when introducing a different idea
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I have learned a lot so far, but when the ideas are different I’m not sure how to proceed. My sentence: “the depth of experience I can offer as well as our strong alignment of shared educational philosophies and mission,...” thanks for any help
commas
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I have learned a lot so far, but when the ideas are different I’m not sure how to proceed. My sentence: “the depth of experience I can offer as well as our strong alignment of shared educational philosophies and mission,...” thanks for any help
commas
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 10 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
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Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00
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I have learned a lot so far, but when the ideas are different I’m not sure how to proceed. My sentence: “the depth of experience I can offer as well as our strong alignment of shared educational philosophies and mission,...” thanks for any help
commas
I have learned a lot so far, but when the ideas are different I’m not sure how to proceed. My sentence: “the depth of experience I can offer as well as our strong alignment of shared educational philosophies and mission,...” thanks for any help
commas
commas
asked Jul 3 at 19:50
Angie
11
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bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 10 mins 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♦ 10 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
1
Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00
add a comment |
1
Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00
1
1
Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00
Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00
add a comment |
1 Answer
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Are you asking if you need a comma before "as well as"? If that is your question, the answer is "no" for the snippet you posted. "As well as" essentially serves the same function as "and" in a series. If your series only contains "depth of experience I can offer" and "our strong alignment of...", then you only have two items-no comma needed.
It may be stronger to write "coupled with," "alongside of," or "in addition to" instead of "as well as" if you are trying to convey that your experience combined with alignment that you personally share with an organization make you a good fit.
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
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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
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up vote
0
down vote
Are you asking if you need a comma before "as well as"? If that is your question, the answer is "no" for the snippet you posted. "As well as" essentially serves the same function as "and" in a series. If your series only contains "depth of experience I can offer" and "our strong alignment of...", then you only have two items-no comma needed.
It may be stronger to write "coupled with," "alongside of," or "in addition to" instead of "as well as" if you are trying to convey that your experience combined with alignment that you personally share with an organization make you a good fit.
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Are you asking if you need a comma before "as well as"? If that is your question, the answer is "no" for the snippet you posted. "As well as" essentially serves the same function as "and" in a series. If your series only contains "depth of experience I can offer" and "our strong alignment of...", then you only have two items-no comma needed.
It may be stronger to write "coupled with," "alongside of," or "in addition to" instead of "as well as" if you are trying to convey that your experience combined with alignment that you personally share with an organization make you a good fit.
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Are you asking if you need a comma before "as well as"? If that is your question, the answer is "no" for the snippet you posted. "As well as" essentially serves the same function as "and" in a series. If your series only contains "depth of experience I can offer" and "our strong alignment of...", then you only have two items-no comma needed.
It may be stronger to write "coupled with," "alongside of," or "in addition to" instead of "as well as" if you are trying to convey that your experience combined with alignment that you personally share with an organization make you a good fit.
Are you asking if you need a comma before "as well as"? If that is your question, the answer is "no" for the snippet you posted. "As well as" essentially serves the same function as "and" in a series. If your series only contains "depth of experience I can offer" and "our strong alignment of...", then you only have two items-no comma needed.
It may be stronger to write "coupled with," "alongside of," or "in addition to" instead of "as well as" if you are trying to convey that your experience combined with alignment that you personally share with an organization make you a good fit.
answered Jul 3 at 20:54
Jeremias
566
566
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
add a comment |
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
1
1
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
Hello, Jeremias. 'Are you asking ... ?' should be confined to 'comments', and no answers guessed at until OP provides clarification.
– Edwin Ashworth
Jul 3 at 21:57
add a comment |
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Not sure I got the objective question you are asking. Could you, please, edit the question and make it clearer?
– gmauch
Jul 4 at 0:00