Hanging Indent is a type of paragraph formatting in which the first line extends to the left of the rest of the paragraph.
A hanging indent is otherwise called a hanging paragraph. With many word processors, you can make hanging indents by indicating a negative space for the principal line of each section. It is a style of content setting in which the primary line of a passage is set to the full measure and consequent lines are indented at the left-hand side.
Organisers of the very first race report that all but 500 of the 15,000 places have now sold out, just a month after they were first released to the public. For anyone itching to be the very first winner, there are only days left to get your entry in.
1.- report because Organizers is plural.
2.- have because 500 of the 15000 is plural.
3.- They were
4.- I don't see any other verb disagreement.
You should always feed a horse with a flat palm so they don't bite you.
Answer:
1. You need to separate these two sentences - <em>Mr. Chakota started</em>... and <em>They were joined</em>... - these are two sentences so there needs to be a period between them.
<em>... and former oDesk colleague Josh Brianlinger. They were joined by...</em>
2. <em>"They're going to get their books from there.</em>" - the words <em>they're</em>, <em>their</em>, and <em>there</em> sound the same but mean different things. <em>They're </em>is short for <em>they are, their </em>means that something belongs to <em>them, </em>and <em>there </em>shows us where something is.
3. <em>Your files are graded on accuracy and formatting AND you're going to need to follow Rev style guidelines.</em> - these are two sentences so you either should add the conjunction AND or separate these two sentences completely by using a period between them.
4. <em>It's important that quality is consistent. </em>- here, you need to use <em>it's </em>(short for <em>it is</em>) instead of <em>its </em>(meaning, belonging to <em>it</em>).
5. <em>Use foreign language tags for foreign language speech... </em>- this sentence doesn't make much sense so you might want to rephrase it completely
6. <em>Please, no iPads, iPhones, </em><em>or </em><em>Android tablets. </em>- here, you need to use <em>or </em>instead of <em>nor</em> because English doesn't support double negatives.