Answer:
Run-on sentences, also known as fused sentences, occur when two complete sentences are squashed together without using a coordinating conjunction or proper punctuation, such as a period or a semicolon.
Run-on sentences can be short or long. A long sentence isn’t necessarily a run-on sentence.
Explanation:
The dog kept running the boy kept running. To correct it: The dog and the kid kept running.
Answer:
“I shall have glory by this losing day, / More than Octavius and Mark Antony”
Explanation:
just did it on ED
Answer:
Have bowled
Explanation:
The past participle for the verb bowl, is bowled, and in this it says "have bowled" cause you have already dont it.
If the sentence in question is a statement (ends with a period), I would probably "however" as your transition word.