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Which sentences are punctuated correctly? Check all that apply. The cake (that I made for my mother’s birthday) was dark chocolate. The nurse, who was kind and compassionate, bandaged my thumb. F. Scott Fitzgerald was a famous writer—who inspired many great films. The coach with the red jacket just paid my brother a huge compliment. Leonardo da Vinci—painter and sculptor—was part of the Renaissance.

User Sisu
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2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

The nurse, who was kind and compassionate, bandaged my thumb. The coach with the red jacket just paid my brother a huge compliment. Leonardo da Vinci—painter and sculptor—was part of the Renaissance.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Justin Cherniak
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6 votes

Answer:

The second, the fourth and the fifth sentences.

Step-by-step explanation:

In the first sentence, "that I made (...) birthday" is an essential or defining relative clause, therefore it should not be separated by any punctuation from the main sentence; the same applies to "who inspired many great films" in the third sentence. In the second sentence, the non-essential clause "who was kind and compassionate" is properly set off with commas, and the same is true for the appositive "painter and sculptor" in the fifth sentence. "With the red jacket" in the fifth sentence is an essential prepositional phrase so it is correct to have it merge with the sentence without punctuation.

User Czerny
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