No. That is just a style problem with the multiple subject, and is acceptable.
Another form is "You, I, and the whole team will go."
A run-on sentence includes more than one thought without using conjunctions to set them apart.
Example :
The dog ran past me he was chasing the cat. (run-on)
A comma does nothing to fix it.
The dog ran past me, he was chasing the cat. (run-on, comma splice)
Two ways it can be fixed :
The dog ran past me. He was chasing the cat.
The dog ran past me as he was chasing the cat.
No. It has a compound subject, but it expresses a single thought. A run-on example would be "You and I and the whole team will go the bus will take us there." You could place a semicolon before "the bus will take us there" to fix the run-on, or make that a separate sentence.
The verb on the sentence: I went for a run - is "went" which is the past of go.
The sentence "I wanted to go to the ballet I was forced to go to the basketball game" is a run on sentence. It should be split into two sentences, or joined with a conjunction.
go to www.uncyclopedia.org/wiki/run-on
A. I went home and ate and ate. B. Before lunch, I played volleyball; after lunch I did again. C. I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right. D. You and I and the whole team will go.
example: and then i ran to the other side of the field but noone was there so i got really mad and i didnt know where to go next it was horrible and the whole day the dumb coach kept picking on me. <--- this is considered as a run on sentence because there are alot of places you can put a period and comma.
if you do not go to the grocery store monthly you will run out of food
false
"You" is the subject. What did you do? you met. "Met" is the verb. "at the park" is a prepositional phrase (where did you meet?). You met to do what? You met to run. So "to run" becomes the direct object of the sentence.
This is a run-on sentence and need to be rewritten.
"Way to go, Sean," the coach shouted, "That was a great run!"
go to team magma's base and run around floor 1