A run-on sentence is a sentence that contains more than one complete idea, without using conjunctions to join them.
Example:
Bill was riding on his bike he would go everywhere on it.
This cannot be fixed just by adding a comma (comma splice). Instead, combine the two ideas, separate them into two sentences, or add a conjunction.
1) Bill was riding his bike everywhere.
2) Bill was riding on his bike. He would go everywhere on it.
3) Bill was riding his bike, and would go everywhere on it.
To fix the run-on sentence, you can separate it into two sentences: "Rajeet opened the window. He loved the smell of a rainstorm."
It's really just 2 separate sentences. We went to my cousin's wedding. Over 300 people were invited.
declarative sentence
Yes, a declarative sentence makes a statement or expresses a fact, opinion, or idea. It ends with a period.
This kind of sentence is called a declarative sentence.
A declarative sentence is a type of sentence that makes a statement or expresses an idea. It usually ends with a period. For example: "The sun is shining."
This sentence is a declarative sentence as it makes a statement.
makes
That sentence is a declarative sentence, a sentence that makes a statement.
A sentence that concludes the paragraph and closes it is a clinching sentence. It is the last sentence in a paragraph that makes a conclusion.
Makes a camp
its a sentence that is about the story but it makes good sense about what your talking about