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MorbidSnail Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Is this a run on-sentence?

I look forward to putting my skills and abilities to use at URS and will call during the week of September 15th to discuss a time to set up an interview and detail my qualifications more fully.

I have a feeling it is but am not sure. Any help would be appreciated.

If you are feeling EXTREMELY bored, a copy of the whole document is in this post

Any proofreading would be appreciated.
  

Top answer

Hi, I look forward to putting my skills and abilities to use at URS and will call during the week of September 15th to discuss a time to set up an interview and detail my qualifications more fully. I have a feeling it is but am not sure. No, it's not.

  • Hi, I look forward to putting my skills and abilities to use at URS and will call during the week of September 15th to discuss a time to set up an interview and detail my qualifications more fully.
  • I have a feeling it is but am not sure.
  • No, it's not.
  • A run-on sentence consists of two or more grammatically separate sentences that the writer has joined into one sentence, usually by using commas instead of periods.
  • eg Mary went to the store, she bought bread.
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1 Answers
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Hi,

I look forward to putting my skills and abilities to use at URS and will call during the week of September 15th to discuss a time to set up an interview and detail my qualifications more fully.

I have a feeling it is but am not sure. No, it's not.

A run-on sentence consists of two or more grammatically separate sentences that the writer has joined into one sentence,

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