Example run on sentence:
"He won the competition last Saturday he celebrated with his family."
Instead of a comma, put a period or a semicolon in between:
"He won the competition last Saturday. He celebrated with his family."
Or combine the sentences, since they have the same subject.
"He won the competition last Saturday, and then celebrated with his family."
The homophone pair that needs to be corrected is "their" and "there".
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.
1. Put a period between the sentences. 2. Put a semicolon ( ; ) between the sentences. 3. Put a comma followed by a conjunction (e.g. and, but, etc.) between the sentences.
a comma splice. This occurs when two independent clauses are incorrectly connected by a comma without a coordinating conjunction. This mistake can be corrected by using a semicolon, period, or conjunction to properly separate the clauses.
Sentences begin with a capital letter, so the word "you" should be capitalized.
They are corrected by the further development of science.
About 3 percent or so.
The past participle of "correct" is "corrected."
"You were leaving the house the door had to be locked" is a run-on sentence because it is really two sentences without proper punctuation. This should read, "You were leaving the house. The door had to be locked."
Run-on sentences occur when two or more independent clauses are improperly joined without appropriate punctuation or conjunctions. For example: "I love to read I go to the library every week." Another example is: "She enjoys painting her friends like to play music." In both cases, the sentences can be corrected by using a period, semicolon, or conjunction.
"We were informed it will be corrected today" is a correct sentence. However, it might sound a little better to say "We were informed that it will be corrected today."