Which sentence does not correctly fix this run-on sentence?
The car skidded luckily no one was near it.
A.
The car skidded; luckily, no one was near it.
B.
The car skidded. Luckily, no one was near it.
C.
The car skidded, but luckily no one was near it.
D.
The car skidded, luckily no one was near it.
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OpenStudy (foreverjennnicole):
What do you think?
OpenStudy (anonymous):
b
OpenStudy (foreverjennnicole):
Nope. Those are two independent clauses that make two separate sentences. It's correct
OpenStudy (anonymous):
c
OpenStudy (foreverjennnicole):
No, that one is correct as well.
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OpenStudy (anonymous):
i think he left
OpenStudy (anonymous):
a
OpenStudy (anonymous):
yo?
OpenStudy (foreverjennnicole):
No. You can't just guess answers; you actually have to try. I'm not going to feed you the answers every single time. The answer is D because a comma can't separate two independent clauses, therefore it's incorrect.
OpenStudy (anonymous):
d
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