Ask Shagg was a syndicated daily comic strip drawn by cartoonist Peter Guren from 1980 to 2020.1 It was distributed by Creators Syndicate; it had been distributed by United Feature Syndicate from 1980 until 1995.2 The strip has run in dozens of newspapers including The Boston Globe, The Columbus Dispatch, and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.2 In each strip Guren, through his Shagg E. Dawg character, answered questions from readers about the animal kingdom. The strip retired on the 5th of January, 2020.3
It is not an Oxford comma, as @DJJG explained, but a comma separating two independent clauses. The Oxford comma (or serial comma) is the final comma in a list. For example: Please bring me a pencil, an eraser, and a notebook.
It is not an Oxford comma, as @DJJG explained, but a comma separating two independent clauses. The Oxford comma (or serial comma) is the final comma in a list. For example: Please bring me a pencil, an eraser, and a notebook.
It is not an Oxford comma, as @DJJG explained, but a comma separating two independent clauses. The Oxford comma (or serial comma) is the final comma in a list. For example: Please bring me a pencil, an eraser, and a notebook.
It is not an Oxford comma, as @DJJG explained, but a comma separating two independent clauses. The Oxford comma (or serial comma) is the final comma in a list. For example: Please bring me a pencil, an eraser, and a notebook.
Read again: it says “both her forearms and hands.”