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That construction is called a "comma splice". It is very common when the second clause begins with words like however or therefore. If you don't have any punctuation at all, it is called a run-on sentence.
I wouldn't use a semicolon in a conditional (if) sentence. Semicolons can join two independent clauses without a conjunction. The "if" clause in a conditional sentence is dependent, not independent.
A colon (:) is frequently used to introduce a list or an example. So, you could say something like "These are the fruits that I can think of off the top of my head: apple, banana, pear, orange, guava, watermelon." A semicolon divides two independent clauses... another way to think of an independent clause is a complete thought... something that could stand on its own. You use the semicolon to combine those two thoughts/sentences/clauses to show that there is a closer connection. "Bob was sad. His dog died." becomes "Bob was sad; his dog died." [There are other ways to connect two independent clauses... by subordinating one of them with a word like "that" or "because" or by using a comma and a coordinating conjunction: "Bob was sad, and his dog died." Each way can give the user a different message or change the meaning.]
The difference between a compound sentence and a complex sentence is that a compound sentence has two independent clauses, connected by a Coordinator. A complex sentence on contains one independent clause. A complex sentence also always contains a subordinator.
When combining (adding) two negatives you get a negative. When multiplying two negatives you will get a positive.
When you combine two independent clauses, you need to separate them with a semicolon--not a comma. If you use a comma instead of a semicolon, the result is called a comma splice.
Yes, compound sentences can be made by joining two independent clauses with a comma and a coordinating conjunction. FANBOYS is an acronym to help you remember coordinating conjunctions.F = forA = andN = norB = butO = orY = yetS = soRemember that a comma is always needed when using a coordinating conjunction to join independent clauses.
Yes, when used to join two independent clauses, and as well as the other coördinating conjunctions should be preceded by a comma.
When joining two independent clauses with a conjunction (such as "and," "but," or "or"), use a comma before the conjunction. For example: "She finished her work, and then she went home."
Yes, that's correct! Compound sentences contain two independent clauses that are joined together with a coordinating conjunction (such as and, but, or, so), along with a comma. This helps to show their relationship and create a more complex sentence structure.
Comma-splice
All you have to do is put a comma and a transition in between the two independent clauses.
A comma splice is characterized by two independent clauses that are incorrectly joined by a comma. This error occurs when two complete thoughts are separated by a comma without the appropriate conjunction or punctuation.
it is a semi colon
A compound sentence becomes a comma splice when two independent clauses are incorrectly joined together with just a comma, without a coordinating conjunction or proper punctuation. This creates a run-on sentence where the two ideas are not properly connected.
A comma splice occurs when two independent clauses are joined together with just a comma. To correct a comma splice, you can replace the comma with a semicolon or period, add a coordinating conjunction after the comma, or restructure the sentence entirely.
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.