Jeff wanted to learn how to surf which isn’t as easy as it looks. He had a surfboard and a wetsuit that he borrowed from some fr
iends. It was easy to stand on a surfboard when it was resting firmly on the sand. When he tried standing on a surfboard once it was in the water bobbing up and down, that was much harder! Which dependent clause needs to be separated by a comma?
Answer: Jeff wanted to learn how to surf, which isn’t as easy as it looks. He had a surfboard and a wetsuit that he borrowed from some friends. It was easy to stand on a surfboard when it was resting firmly on the sand. When he tried standing on a surfboard once it was in the water bobbing up and down, that was much harder!
Explanation: cause it doesn't really make sense when it says Jeff wanted to learn how to surf which isn’t as easy as it looks. Bc he was he wanted to learn how to surf then he was saying it isn't easy.
Kinda hard for me to explain it. I think it would be better if you just added an extra word too it. Like, “ She is the most, if not the absolute most interesting interviewer you have had.. and I would say “ on your channel so far.”
Santiago meets Melchizedek, he learns to recognize all of creation in a single grain of sand, and in the greatest test he faces during the book, he finds he is able to enlist the desert in his effort to become the wind.