Fedex - DON'T RELY ON FED EX
- by Anonymous Feb 05
- Review #: 381842
| Company | Fedex |
| Location | New York City, New York |
| Category | Shipping |
| Views | 12 |
$15
My Problem with ? The lazy driver cant deliver a package or there is something wrong with her . I called the 1 800 number in there web and guess what when I got hold of the facility they inform me is like the first time I have complain there was no complain added mind you this is the 5th day and still no package but I keep calling letting them know what she keeps doing I keep track of all my package if I'm paying they have to deliver But it will be my I ever use fed ex FED EX IS THE WORST CARRIER 3111db1
Feb 06 from Tenafly, New Jersey
Feb 06 from Tenafly, New Jersey
Feb 05 from Tenafly, New Jersey
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A run-on sentence is a sentence in which two or more independent clauses (i.e., complete sentences) are joined without appropriate punctuation or conjunction. It is generally considered a stylistic error, though it is occasionally used in literature and may be used as a rhetorical device. An example of a run-on is a comma splice, in which two independent clauses are joined with a comma without an accompanying coordinating conjunction.[1][2] Some prescriptivists exclude comma splices from the definition of a run-on sentence,[3] but this does not imply that they consider comma splices to be acceptable.
The mere fact that a sentence is long does not make it a run-on sentence; sentences are run-ons only when they contain more than one independent clause. A run-on sentence can be as short as four words—for instance: I drive she walks. In this case there are two independent clauses: two subjects paired with two intransitive verbs. So as long as clauses are punctuated appropriately, a writer can assemble multiple independent clauses in a single sentence; in fact, a properly constructed sentence can be extended indefinitely.
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