Main idea is what you're looking for.
Winter is coming; I need a new coat.
Winter is coming, so I need a new coat.
Because winter is coming, I need a new coat.
The sentence structure of the original sentence is wrong because it is a run on sentence. The sentence has two complete thoughts/ideas without the proper punctuation between them. The first complete thought is "Winter is coming". The second complete thought is "I need a new coat." These need to either be joined with a semicolon or a comma and conjunction. The first answer uses the semicolon to join the two complete ideas into a compound sentence. The second correct answer uses a comma and conjunction, so, to join the two complete ideas. The last correct answer creates a dependent clause by beginning the sentence with "because". Then the comma shows the separation between the dependent clause and the independent clause.
Answer:
No thanks. We already saw it. We saw it last week.
I wrote it already. I wrote it two days ago and gave it to him. OR I already wrote it. I worte it two days ago and gave it to him.
I don't understand the question?
Explanation:
I'm not sure if I did this correctly, and if you colud explain teh third question, that would be great.
1) the correct answer is B True love is inexplicable and boundless.
2) the correct answer is C “I love you without knowing how, or when, or from where” (Line 9).
3) the correct answer is A urgent and passionate.
4) At the beginning of the poem, he says why he does not love her. He doesn't love her as if she was a salt-rose, topaz, or carnation, but he loves her as if she was a plant that does not bloom. This means that he does not love her superficially, but he loves her deeply for who she is on the inside.
Flowers are beautiful things that everyone admires, but no one would admire a flower that doesn’t bloom because they could not see the beauty that it contains.
<span>Mrs. Jenkins pulled a compact from her purse and checked her makeup.
The noun compact refers to a small case with makeup and a mirror. This is the only sentence in which compact is used as a noun, and it is used correctly as it is referring to the makeup device. The other sentences use compact as an adjective and a verb.</span>