Which of the following is right? "Good morning John"? or "Good morning, John"?
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Probably you will not be shot if you fail to include the comma, but why take the risk? – Hot Licks Apr 16 '20 at 02:10
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Definitely include the comma. 'Good morning' is the declarative statement, the core of the sentence fragment. 'John' is a qualifier, a separate add-on that clarifies who speaker is directing statement to. Compare: "Good morning, whoever you are."
Without a comma, the phrase would means something along the lines of 'John of good mornings'. (Some people might like to be greeted that way!) The 'good morning' would be an adjectival phrase attached to 'John' as the noun.
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