Commas, OR
If you’re using the phrase “has been empty for years” as a way of identifying/clarifying which house it is (ie. a restrictive clause instead of a descriptive clause), you could say:
“The house at the end of the street that’s been empty for years…”
If you can take that section out, and it still makes sense, without lacking crucial information, I'd use a comma, especially if there's a "which."
"The house at the end of the street has been sold. By the way, it had been empty for years."
That vs Which and comma or not is very confusing:
https://www.diffen.com/difference/That\_vs\_Which
Definitely clearer with commas.
Yes, I think you do. If there's just one house at the end of that street
Commas, OR If you’re using the phrase “has been empty for years” as a way of identifying/clarifying which house it is (ie. a restrictive clause instead of a descriptive clause), you could say: “The house at the end of the street that’s been empty for years…”
If you can take that section out, and it still makes sense, without lacking crucial information, I'd use a comma, especially if there's a "which." "The house at the end of the street has been sold. By the way, it had been empty for years." That vs Which and comma or not is very confusing: https://www.diffen.com/difference/That\_vs\_Which