Answer:
28) He’s worked for that company since last June.
29) “Have you been to Russia.” - “Yes, I have .” A) Had / be / haven’t C) Have / be / have
30) Have you done your homework?
31) I haven’t done it yet.
32) What are you going to wear this evening?
33) I am not going to drink/I won't drink because it is too sweet. (it could be either)
34) I’ve seen the latest Star Wars film. I saw it last week.
35) She’s written the letter. She wrote it yesterday
Answer:
Yeah ill be crying and itching and burning and ill try to run away or tell my parents NO
Answer:
Compound
Explanation:
A simple sentence contains one independent clause. A compound sentence contains more than one! Put another way: a simple sentence contains a subject and a predicate, but a compound sentence contains more than one subject and more than one predicate.
Answer:
D. Martin Luther King's famous speech used two memorable refrains: "I have a dream" and "Let freedom ring".
Explanation:
A colon instead of a semicolon may be used between independent clauses when the second sentence explains, illustrates, paraphrases, or expands on the first sentence.
The hard and fast rule is that a colon must ALWAYS follow a complete sentence.
A run-on sentence is a sentence having two independent clauses with improper punctuation and without conjunctions. The correct answer is option b. It is difficult to understand a run-on sentence because you cannot identify where to pause or stop and that the sentence does not have conjunctions which would help in the transition of clauses.