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No, none and none of - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary
from English Grammar Today. No and none of are determiners. None is a pronoun. No, none and none of indicate negation. We use no directly before nouns: I’ve got no time to waste. There are no people I recognise here. She says she has no friends. None is the pronoun form of no. None means ‘not one’ or ‘not any’.
After, afterwards - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary
from English Grammar Today. After as a preposition and conjunction. After means ‘later than’ and ‘next in time or place’. After can be used before a noun phrase (as a preposition): Shall we have a swim after lunch? The bank is just after the park, on the left. After can introduce a clause (as a conjunction):
punctuation - Comma or period after "No" - English Language & Usage ...
Can one argue here that "No" stands for "No, I am not going home" and hence require a period, as what follows it "I am going to the party" is essentially a second independent clause. The full version would read "No I am not going to home. I am going to the party".
Comma or semicolon after "No" when responding to a question
6. @XavierVidalHernández Your understanding of No as an adverbial phrase optionally taking a comma is at best suspect! It might even be wrong! – tchrist ♦. Aug 17, 2012 at 16:31. 1. I've never seen a semicolon used after 'No'. I've only ever seen 'No ...', 'No, ...', or 'No. ...' – Mitch.
Rules for Using Commas, With Examples | Grammarly
Grammarly. Updated on July 1, 2023 Grammar. Ah, the comma. Of all the punctuation marks in English, this one is perhaps the most misused. And it’s no wonder. There are lots of rules about comma usage, and often the factors that determine whether you should use one are quite subtle. But fear not!
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