A semicolon (;) more often serves this purpose. When you have two related ideas and they will stand as individual sentences, but you want to show the close relation, use a semicolon.
ex. He was mad at her; she had really screwed up.
ex. Fall had come; the maple trees were dazzling.
technically a comma would be incorrect in these situations, although you probably will see it.
When two sentences are written as one and seperated by a comma, they are called a run-on or fused sentence.
A compound sentence consists of two independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinating 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.
A comma splice is the use of a comma to join two independent clauses without a conjunction. It is considered an error in formal writing.
A compound sentence often consists of two independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinating conjunction.
When two sentences are written as one and seperated by a comma, they are called a run-on or fused sentence.
A compound sentence consists of two independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinating 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.
A comma splice is the use of a comma to join two independent clauses without a conjunction. It is considered an error in formal writing.
A compound sentence often consists of two independent clauses joined by a comma and a coordinating conjunction.
In formal writing a comma is not to be used two join two independent clauses. If comma is used between two sentences consisting of independent clauses it is known as comma splice. Two sentences formed by independent clauses should always be joined by a co-ordinate conjunction or a short punctuation mark such as semicolon if the sentences are closely related.
A 2A sentence is a sentence that contains 2 adjectives separated by comma.
No. They are separated by a semi-colon.
It is called a compound sentence. The lady wore a sunhat, her male companion was hatless.
A compound sentence consists of two independent clauses that are usually separated by a comma, like in this example.
Oh honey, you're mixing up your punctuation marks. A sentence is typically separated by a period or a question mark, not a comma. But hey, at least you're trying to learn something new.
A comma splice is when a two complete sentences are separated by a comma, without a conjunction. This makes it gramatically incorrect. A run-on sentence continues on and on with no clear predicate.