Question
Which sentence correctly uses a nonrestrictive clause?(1 point)
Responses
My friend watched a movie yesterday—my favorite one.
My friend watched a movie yesterday—my favorite one.
Her (oldest sister) Mallory has a wonderful singing voice.
Her (oldest sister) Mallory has a wonderful singing voice.
The dog—who is black and brown jumped over the fence.
The dog—who is black and brown jumped over the fence.
I like to eat pizza (best with extra cheese while it is hot.
I like to eat pizza (best with extra cheese while it is hot.
Responses
My friend watched a movie yesterday—my favorite one.
My friend watched a movie yesterday—my favorite one.
Her (oldest sister) Mallory has a wonderful singing voice.
Her (oldest sister) Mallory has a wonderful singing voice.
The dog—who is black and brown jumped over the fence.
The dog—who is black and brown jumped over the fence.
I like to eat pizza (best with extra cheese while it is hot.
I like to eat pizza (best with extra cheese while it is hot.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The sentence that correctly uses a nonrestrictive clause is:
"The dog—who is black and brown—jumped over the fence."
In this case, the clause "who is black and brown" provides additional information about the dog but does not change the fundamental meaning of the sentence. It is correctly set off by dashes.
"The dog—who is black and brown—jumped over the fence."
In this case, the clause "who is black and brown" provides additional information about the dog but does not change the fundamental meaning of the sentence. It is correctly set off by dashes.
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