You have to put some punctuation in there before it's possible to answer this. Right now, the winner is your entire sentence - it's a big run-on.
B Before lunch I played volleyball after lunch I did again
A. I went home and ate and ate. B. Before lunch, I played volleyball; after lunch I did again. C. I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right. D. You and I and the whole team will go.
yes
Yes, this is a run-on sentence, because it contains two independent clauses (each can stand alone as a sentence) that are not separated by any punctuation or conjunction.The following are examples of how to correct this error:Before lunch you played volleyball. After lunch you played again.Before lunch you played volleyball; after lunch you played again.Before lunch you played volleyball, and after lunch you played again.
I was in disquietude when i realized that my house was unlocked when i know that I locked it before i left.
The comma, is a way to split a thought or pause mid-sentence. the comma is never found before or after the sentence itself. -3rd grade sentence structure buddy-
Volleyball Tennis
My joy was ephemeral, disappearing when I realized that this grand feast would be the last thing to touch my lips before I was lynched before an angry mob.
Premeditated means to be thought of before hand. An example sentence would be: It was very obvious, the crime was premeditated.
---- i dont know i never played volleyball before ---- i dont know i never played volleyball before ---- i dont know i never played volleyball before ---- i dont know i never played volleyball before
I don't think they played volleyball before the actual volleyball came out
A match in volleyball is a game to 25 but before it was a game to 15.