Asked by shawda

Read this run-on sentence.

Shannon enjoys cooking she likes to go out to restaurants sometimes, too.

Which of the following makes this sentence correct?


Shannon enjoys cooking; and she likes to go out to restaurants sometimes, too.


Shannon enjoys cooking, but she likes to go out to restaurants sometimes, too.


Shannon enjoys cooking, she likes to go out to restaurants sometimes, too.


Shannon enjoys cooking she likes, to go out to restaurants sometimes, too

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"Shannon enjoys cooking, but she likes to go out to restaurants sometimes, too."

This is correct because it joins the two independent clauses with a comma plus the coordinating conjunction "but." (Other options either create a comma splice, misuse a semicolon with "and," or place commas incorrectly.)