Asked by hm
Which of the following options is the right way to utilize an ellipsis for the purpose of omission for the sentence, "After lunch, I went to math class, which was right down the hall, and then got on the bus to go home."? (Illuminate)
After lunch, I went to math class, which was right down the hall... and then got on the bus to go home.
After lunch, I went to math class, which was right down the hall, and then...got on the bus to go home.
After lunch...I went to math class, which was right down the hall, and then got on the bus to go home.
After lunch, I went to math class...and then got on the bus to go home.
After lunch, I went to math class, which was right down the hall... and then got on the bus to go home.
After lunch, I went to math class, which was right down the hall, and then...got on the bus to go home.
After lunch...I went to math class, which was right down the hall, and then got on the bus to go home.
After lunch, I went to math class...and then got on the bus to go home.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The right way to utilize an ellipsis for the purpose of omission in the given sentence is:
**"After lunch, I went to math class...and then got on the bus to go home."**
This option effectively indicates that some part of the sentence has been omitted while still maintaining the overall clarity and structure.
**"After lunch, I went to math class...and then got on the bus to go home."**
This option effectively indicates that some part of the sentence has been omitted while still maintaining the overall clarity and structure.
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