It can give someone 3 wishes
<em>Let's review our options</em>
<em>Social Security Number</em><em>, this will be needed as it will prove you are a citizen in the United States and not some scammer looking for money to keep.</em>
<em>Completion of High-School Education</em><em>, FAFSA is only awarded to those going to college and you must complete high school to do so.</em>
<em>A sports scholarship</em><em>, Not needed for the FAFSA as you won't get as much or any money from the FAFSA if you are receiving aid already.</em>
<em>Submission of FAFSA</em><em>, This is the most obvious one, the only way to get money from FAFSA is to submit the free application.</em>
<em>Professional Work Experience</em><em>, this is not needed, if you are applying for FAFSA and have an income you will get less money.</em>
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<em>Social Security Number, Completion of High-School Education, and Submission of FAFSA are correct!</em>
Answer:
B. Run-On/Comma Splice
Explanation:
Fragments are incomplete sentences. They are missing one of three main elements: a subject, a verb, and a complete thought. In the given example, the sentence has a subject, a verb, and the thought is complete. We easily understand what information was given. <u>So this is NOT a fragment, option A.</u>
A complete sentence must have a subject, a verb, an object, a complete thought. As our sentence has two independent clauses, it has two complete thoughts, it is a compound sentence. <u>So this is NOT option C.</u>
A comma splice occurs when two or more independent clauses are joined by just a comma and no coordinating conjunction. In the given example there is no comma, so this is not a comma splice.
Run-on sentences have two independent clauses, but they were not properly connected, that is no mark of punctuation. In the given example we have two independent clauses that were connected without punctuation mark or any coordinating conjunction. So this is the Run-on sentence. <u>Option B is correct.</u>
I hope it helped you :) Have a good day!