Asked by fernanda
Moana bought a green wig, she wore it to lunch.
Correct
Run-On
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
This is a comma splice (a type of run-on). Two independent clauses—"Moana bought a green wig" and "she wore it to lunch"—are joined with only a comma.
Fixes:
- Split into two sentences: Moana bought a green wig. She wore it to lunch.
- Use a semicolon: Moana bought a green wig; she wore it to lunch.
- Add a coordinating conjunction: Moana bought a green wig, and she wore it to lunch.
- Use a participial phrase: Having bought a green wig, Moana wore it to lunch.
- Combine elements: Moana wore the green wig she had bought to lunch.
Which option would you prefer for tone or style?
Fixes:
- Split into two sentences: Moana bought a green wig. She wore it to lunch.
- Use a semicolon: Moana bought a green wig; she wore it to lunch.
- Add a coordinating conjunction: Moana bought a green wig, and she wore it to lunch.
- Use a participial phrase: Having bought a green wig, Moana wore it to lunch.
- Combine elements: Moana wore the green wig she had bought to lunch.
Which option would you prefer for tone or style?
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