An abstract representation of the year 1984 with music-related imagery. Perhaps, musical notes can be creatively incorporated into the numbers forming the year 1984. Additionally, icons indicating celebration or positivity could be included to portray the greatness of the year for music. Colors could be vibrant to grasp attention and make it appealing, yet there should be no text within the image.

Identify the correct sentence:

A.A great year for music was 1984
B.Nineteen eighty four was a great year for music.
C. 1984 was a great year for music.
D.A great year for music was nineteen eighty four.

C.

It's not C, because I took this quiz and C was wrong. It is A because you do not start a sentence with numerals, but you also do not spell out the year in a sentence. You only spell our decades and centuries.

Got it wrong by choosing B. What a pain.

Can confirm the correct answer is A

No. I think the rules are changing on this, but it is not correct, in traditional grammar, to begin a sentence with numerals. Within a sentence, it is correct to use numerals instead of spelling out big numbers like 1984, but one spells it out at the beginning. B is correct. But that rule may be changing by common use (which is how language changes in all times and places).

Reed, how annoying. Wish it'd be as simple as C. I will be selecting B and will be confirming if this is the correct answer with a follow up message soon.

The answer is C. D and B are wrong because eighty four is not hyphenated

The correct sentence is C. "1984 was a great year for music."

To identify the correct sentence, you need to ensure that the sentence has proper grammar and is clear in terms of meaning. In this case, option C meets these criteria. It states the year first, followed by the description "was a great year for music." This sentence is straightforward and grammatically correct, making it the correct choice.