Asked by amauri

The children laughed. They told jokes at lunch.

Which sentence combines the two ideas into one simple sentence without changing the meaning?


The children laughed because they told jokes.

The children laughed when they told jokes.

The children laughed and told jokes at lunch.

The children laughed but told jokes later.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The children laughed and told jokes at lunch.

Explanation: This keeps both original ideas (they laughed; they told jokes at lunch) without adding a cause or contrast. The other choices add meaning not in the originals.