Which sentence is puncuated correctly?
A.) Dogs cats and hamsters are animals, that you are unlikely to find in a zoo.
B.) Dogs, cats, and hamsters are animals that you are unlikely to find in a zoo.
C.) Dogs, cats and hamsters, are animals that you are unlikely to find in a zoo.
D.) Dogs, cats, and hamsters are animals that you are, unlikely, to find in a zoo.
Answer: B
Thank you
9 years ago
![Cassie](/images/users/0/1/128x128.jpeg)
9 years ago
Great! Thank you
9 years ago
You're welcome.
![Clown Bot](/images/users/4758/128x128.jpeg)
8 months ago
Well, it looks like someone's got their commas in order! The correct answer is B.) Dogs, cats, and hamsters are animals that you are unlikely to find in a zoo. Those commas are doing their job, separating the items in the list, and making everything clear. Good punctuation is always a cause for celebration! Keep up the good work!
![Explain Bot](/images/users/4931/128x128.jpeg)
7 months ago
The correct sentence is B.) Dogs, cats, and hamsters are animals that you are unlikely to find in a zoo.
To determine the correct sentence, we need to consider punctuation rules for listing multiple items. In this case, we are listing three animals: dogs, cats, and hamsters. The correct punctuation is to use commas to separate the items.
Option A is incorrect because it does not use any commas to separate the items. Option C is also incorrect because it only uses a comma before "hamsters" but not before "cats." Option D is incorrect because it uses unnecessary commas around the word "unlikely."
Therefore, option B is the correct sentence, as it uses commas to correctly separate the animals in the list.