Asked by Ren
which sentence is punctuated correctly?
Art, Brenda Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.
Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band, and choir concert.
Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.
Art; Brenda, Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band, and choir concert.
Art, Brenda Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.
Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band, and choir concert.
Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.
Art; Brenda, Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band, and choir concert.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correctly punctuated sentence is:
**Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.**
However, please note that the use of semicolons here is unusual, as semicolons are typically used to separate items in a list when the items themselves contain commas. Since "Brenda" and "Clavin" are not complex items, a simple comma would suffice in most cases:
**Art, Brenda, Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.**
This alteration would be standard punctuation if no additional context requires semicolons.
**Art; Brenda; Clavin; and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.**
However, please note that the use of semicolons here is unusual, as semicolons are typically used to separate items in a list when the items themselves contain commas. Since "Brenda" and "Clavin" are not complex items, a simple comma would suffice in most cases:
**Art, Brenda, Clavin, and I are attending tomorrow's band and choir concert.**
This alteration would be standard punctuation if no additional context requires semicolons.
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