The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "My family visited Washington, D.C., and spent three days exploring the Smithsonian." This includes adding a comma after "Washington" and using periods in "D.C." to indicate it is an abbreviation. Additionally, the sentence begins with a capital letter.
The correct punctuation for your sentence is: "My family visited Washington, D.C., and spent three days exploring the Smithsonian." Make sure to use a comma after "Washington" and include periods in "D.C." for proper abbreviation. Additionally, "visited" should replace "visit" to maintain the correct verb tense.
The best place to find historically correct Vikings pictures, would be at the Smithsonian Museum. The Smithsonian is located in Washington DC. So if you are wanting the most accurate pictures that is the place that I would suggest for someone.
It should be --- The professor is running late; she had to change a flat tire.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun, meaning the "Smithsonian Institution" (museums and research facilities operated by the US government).
Seattle, Washington
The spelling "comer" is someone who comes, or the Spanish verb comer, "to eat."Similar words arecoma (koh-ma) - a deep subconscious state, or the head of a cometcomma - the puntuation mark (,)
He Found the Newfound Land I dont think that that /\ answer is correct | |
Precisely the way you spelled it in your question.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "I was born in December 16, 1967," Washington said, Sheila.
George Washington
The correct spelling of the US city and state is "Washington."