Which of the following sentences accurately combines these two independent clauses?
1. The glass orb has magical powers.
2. Golan has stolen the glass orb.
The cat meowed loudly, and it demanded attention.
An example of two sentences written as one sentence and usually separated by a comma is "I went for a run in the morning, it felt refreshing." This structure is called a comma splice, which combines two independent clauses in a single sentence.
A compound sentence combines two independent clauses with a comma and a coordinating conjunction, such as "and," "but," or "so." It is a way to express two related ideas in a single sentence.
No, that is not true. In compound sentences, two or more independent clauses are placed on separate base lines. Each independent clause is typically joined by a coordinating conjunction or a semicolon.
Yes, this is a fused sentence because it combines two independent clauses without proper punctuation or a conjunction to separate them. To correct it, you can add a semicolon or a conjunction like "but" or "and" between the clauses.
Conjunctions such as "although," "because," "while," and "since" are commonly used in complex sentences to connect independent and dependent clauses. These conjunctions help show the relationship between the ideas in the clauses.
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An example of two sentences written as one sentence and usually separated by a comma is "I went for a run in the morning, it felt refreshing." This structure is called a comma splice, which combines two independent clauses in a single sentence.
These are called independent clauses.
These are called independent clauses.
With compound sentences, the two independent clauses are each diagrammed on their own base lines. (A+)
The two types of compound sentences are coordinated compound sentences, where independent clauses are joined by a coordinating conjunction, and subordinated compound sentences, where independent clauses are joined by a subordinating conjunction.
A compound sentence combines two independent clauses with a comma and a coordinating conjunction, such as "and," "but," or "so." It is a way to express two related ideas in a single sentence.
Well, the usual sentence classifications are simple sentences, compound sentences, complex sentences, and compound-complex sentences. Simple sentences are the most basic kind, they consist of one independent clause. Compound sentences contain two independent clauses. Complex sentences contain an independent clause and a dependent clause. Compound-complex sentences contain at least two independent clauses and one dependent clause.
It can't be a run-on. It's a single independent clause. Sentences can have 2 independent clauses or subordinate clauses too.
The sentence is a run-on. It combines two independent clauses without proper punctuation. It can be corrected by adding a comma before "the students" or by separating the clauses into two sentences.
A compound sentence has at least two independent clauses but no subordinate clauses (which are only in complex or compound-complex sentences).
The three different kinds of sentences are simple, compound, and complex. Simple sentences require one independent clause but no dependent clauses. Compound sentences are made up of 2 independent clauses and a dependent clause is possible. A complex sentence requires one independent clause and one dependent clause