The answer is will because it is helping combine the sentence together.
Answer:
An absolute phrase is a type of the phrase which modifies a noun in a sentence, but without being connected to the sentence with a conjunction. An absolute phrase is separated from the rest of the sentence by a comma, and if we remove the phrase the sentence won't lose its original meaning.
e.g. Her luggage has been packed, Sarah went to the airport.
We create an absolute sentence when we want to add some unnecessary detail to our sentence, but without changing its original meaning. In the example above, the first part of the sentence represents the absolute phrase, while the second part of the sentence contains the important information - that Sarah went to the airport.
Answer:
Add what article, book, or site the quote comes from
Explanation:
The given sentence can be revised by adding what article, book, or site the quote comes from.
A hyphen after the word <em>writes </em>isn't necessary because all necessary quotation marks are already used. The quote is preceded by a comma and framed with quotation marks, which is correct. This is why the first and last options are incorrect.
The second option is incorrect because analysis would require you to write more sentences, and all you need to do is revise the given one. That leaves us with the third option as the correct one.
The change that could be made to revise this sentence is to change and to but.