Organizing sentences around a central idea creates A SUPPORTING DETAILS.
Supporting details refers to those sentences that are used by the author to explain, clarify, describe, expand, illustrate and develop his main idea. Those sentences are usually made up of facts, statements and examples that enhance the understanding of the readers about the main idea.<span />
The reader has to keep very careful track of the character
Hello! Gramatically, let's look at each choice-
(a) says: Mrs. Anderson flies to Sweden tomorrow her plane leaves at 2:00 P.M.
This can't be right, because it's a run-on sentence! If someone were to say this outloud, it would sound as if someone wasn't "taking their time"!
(b) says: Mrs. Anderson flies to Sweden tomorrow, her plane leaves at 2:00 P.M.
This one looks correct. It has a comma which adds a pause. It also connects both statements made in the sentence.
(c) says: Mrs. Anderson flies to sweden tomorrow, and her plane leaves at 2:00 P.M.
This one wouldn't be correct because its listing ideas with "and" in between. It's as if the speaker is saying "she does this and this and that and that..."
So your best choice would be B.
Answer:
I helped a old lady with her stalled car then I checked the battery cable
Hello. You did not enter the text to which this question refers, however, after searching for it on the internet, I was able to find another question exactly the same as yours that presented the text "NOAA’s Big Miracle Worker" as the text in question. If this is your case I hope the answer below can help you.
Answer and Explanation:
The text is an interview with Dave Withrow about the operation that allowed the rescue of three gray whales that were trapped in Barrow, Alaska in 1988. Withrow shows that he was the qualified professional to work in this operation because he had experience working with marine manifers, such as whales, because when he worked at NOAA at the Alaska Fisheries Science Center, his department was responsible for taking care of any matter related to whales. This can be seen in the first paragraph of the text, in the lines: “... anything whale-related, especially on the West Coast, comes through our office.”