Asked by potato
Use the sentences to answer the question.
The soccer player runs to the goal. He kicks the ball in and scores a point.
Which sentence best combines the two sentences using a participial phrase?
(1 point)
Responses
Running to the goal, the soccer player kicks the ball in and scores a point.
Running to the goal, the soccer player kicks the ball in and scores a point.
Running to the goal, the soccer player scores a point and kicks the ball in.
Running to the goal, the soccer player scores a point and kicks the ball in.
Running to the goal, a point is scored as the soccer player kicks the ball in.
Running to the goal, a point is scored as the soccer player kicks the ball in.
Running to the goal, the ball flies in as the soccer player scores a point.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Running to the goal, the soccer player kicks the ball in and scores a point.
This places the participial phrase ("Running to the goal") next to the noun it modifies ("the soccer player") and keeps the original action order.
This places the participial phrase ("Running to the goal") next to the noun it modifies ("the soccer player") and keeps the original action order.
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