A comma splice is where two independent clauses (complete sentences) are joined together with a comma without also including a conjunction such as "and" or "but." Sentences B and D above both contain comma splices (the comma after "century" in B and the comma after "areas" in D). D is also missing a capital letter at the beginning of the sentence. The problem in sentence C is the commas surrounding the word "however." When the word "however is used to join two independent clauses like this, it should be preceded by a semicolon and followed by a comma. In this sentence, the semicolon belongs after the word "area." The word "however" begins the second independent clause. Thus, the only correct sentence above is A.
Answer:
body
Explanation:
your intro would include your main topic and what you plan to prove or say.
the conclusion would summarize everything and repeat your main phrase at the beginning in some sort of fashion.
The body is where all the good stuff is...
People are happy, excited, Give people reason to care and most of all clarify your values.
I know this is a late answer. but I thought why not anyway.
Answer:
Stay true to what you believe
Answer:
Fragment sentence
Explanation:
In order for "grate day" to become a sentence it has to have a explanation to a topic, like "Have a grate day!".