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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... As a veteran automotive reporter and reviewer, I get behind the wheel and write about vehicles without any sales spin. I cover topics that matter to consumers, from adaptive cruise control to cold-weather car care to helping you decide which car to buy and why. As senior journalist covering the autos section at Tribune Publishing, I reported on stories of national and local significance, ranging from the closure of emissions testing facilities to the death of the manual transmission. My syndicated auto review column covered hundreds of vehicles from three-row SUVs to three-wheel electric scooters. A master’s graduate of Columbia College Chicago and Skip Barber Racing School, I am an award-winning writer, editor, and teacher. I believe in the Oxford comma, hybrid powertrains, and the minivan as the greatest utility vehicle. Have a question? Please reach out. If I don’t have the answer then I can lead you to one. ... "
" ... The comma in the above sentence quite deliberately divides the two concepts that are contained in this section. The first concept is what the receiver may be appointed for, and that is "of the distributions" — and which is very, very different than "of the company". Contrary to the popular belief of some judgment enforcement lawyers, far from authorizing a receiver to take control of the company whose interest is subject to a charging order, this claim specifically limits the power of the court to appointing a receiver only over the distributions themselves. Or, to state it differently, about the only real practical that the receiver can have under this particular clause is to cash checks from the LLC. Therefore, it was clear error for the Superior Court to issue an order that the receiver could take over Sy's husband's LLC or its accounts, etc. ... "
" ... You do remember Interjections, right? Sing it with me: "Interjections show excitement or emotion, they're generally set apart from a sentence by an exclamation point, or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong." ... "
" ... • Use of the Oxford comma. ... "