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Which sentence is punctuated correctly? A)If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty I would be happy to take you there.

2 Answers

4 votes

Well I assume A because its the only one you put.

User Ibininja
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6 votes

The answer choices are the following:

A) If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty I would be happy to take you there.

B) If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty; I would be happy to take you there.

C) If you would like, to see the Statue of Liberty, I would be happy to take you there.

D) If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty, I would be happy to take you there.

Answer:

D) If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty, I would be happy to take you there.

Step-by-step explanation:

This sentence is formed by two clauses: a subordinate adverb clause (If you would like to see the Statue of Liberty) and an independent clause (I would be happy to take you there). When a subordinate clause comes before the main clause, the subordinate clause should be followed by a comma to separate the subordinate clause information with the independent clause's information, just like it is in option D.

User Denian
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7.6k points

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