Answer:
Immigrants from non-European countries
.
Explanation:
In Bharati Mukherjee’s essay “A Four-Hundred-Year-Old Woman” the writer talks about her journey – from an Irish catholic school in India to her establishment as a writer in the US.
Due to the fear that reigned in her hometown, she was sent to a foreign school in order to prepare her for emigration.
She’s writing now from a point of view of someone who’s made it to the United States and in this sentence she’s referring to those who’ve had the same destiny as hers – Third World country immigrants forced to live their motherland.
Answer:
1.My cat loves salmon she goes crazy when she smells it.
2.Donna lives in Orlando her school in Winter Park is not within walking distance.
3.Her husband is a software engineer he designs computer programs.
Explanation:
The three sentences above each have two independent sentences that should be linked by a punctuation (a comma, semicolon or semicolon) or by a preposition that connects them in a coherent way and makes the reading more fluid and paused. However, this did not happen and the two sentences were joined without any connective between them, but they are capable of providing a coherent and understandable thought. When this occurs, it is called a fused (or run-on) sentence.
It doesn't contain any punctuation, first of all, and second, it doesn't have a subject. To be a sentence, it must contain a subject. It also must contain one main clause.
-DustinBR