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A. Volt
B. Ohm
C. Ampere
D. Coulomb
A. Volt
B. Ohm
C. Ampere
D. Coulomb
- It?s late; in addition, we?re tired.
- It?s late, in addition we?re tired.
- It?s late; we?re tired in addition.
- It?s late; we are, in addition tired.
- He runs; he wins.
- He runs; and wins.
- He runs; therefore, he wins.
- He runs fast; however, he is calm.
- A complete sentence
- A conjunctive adverb
- A list with internal commas
- A sentence fragment
- After interjections
- Before a quote
- Between independent clauses
- Before dependent clauses
- She plays violin; and he sings.
- She plays violin; he sings.
- She plays; violin, and he sings.
- She plays violin; but he sings.
- A semicolon can replace a coordinating conjunction
- A semicolon always introduces a list
- A semicolon ends a paragraph
- A semicolon is like a dash
- Dependent
- Unrelated
- Closely related and independent
- Fragments
- After ?I came? and ?I saw?
- After ?I saw? only
- After ?I conquered?
- Only after ?I came?
- In a compound sentence without a conjunction
- Before a dependent clause
- In short phrases
- In subject-verb agreement
- She is tired; nevertheless, she works.
- She is tired; she works; nevertheless.
- She is tired; but she works.
- She is tired; and she works.
- I have friends in Spain; France and Italy.
- I have friends in Spain, France, and Italy.
- I have friends; in Spain, France, and Italy.
- I have friends in Spain France and Italy.
- Period
- Comma
- Dash
- Colon
- I studied hard; I failed.
- I studied hard; however, I failed.
- I studied hard; and I failed.
- I studied hard. However, I failed.
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