Question 2·Medium·Boundaries
In her latest collection of essays, writer Maia Hernandez explores the influence of urban green spaces on public _____ essays combine scientific research with personal reflections, offering readers both data and narrative insight.
Which choice completes the text so that it conforms to the conventions of Standard English?
For punctuation boundary questions, first test whether the words before and after the underline each form a complete sentence (subject + verb + complete thought). If both sides are independent clauses, eliminate options that use only a comma (comma splice) or that create faulty structures with conjunctions. Then choose between a semicolon and a period by considering capitalization and how closely related the ideas are, making sure the choice follows standard sentence-boundary and capitalization rules.
Hints
Identify the structure on each side of the blank
Cover the blank with your finger and read the words before it, then the words after it. Ask yourself: does each side have a subject and a verb and express a complete idea?
Think about how to join two complete sentences
If both sides are complete sentences, consider what punctuation is allowed to join them: can you use a comma alone, or do you need something stronger like a semicolon or a period?
Check capitalization and sentence flow
Look at how the word after the punctuation is written in each option. Does the capitalization fit with the punctuation mark that comes before it, and does the sentence read smoothly and grammatically?
Step-by-step Explanation
Check the clause before the blank
Read the part of the sentence before the blank:
"In her latest collection of essays, writer Maia Hernandez explores the influence of urban green spaces on public health"
This has a subject ("writer Maia Hernandez") and a verb ("explores"), and it expresses a complete idea, so it is an independent clause (a complete sentence).
Check the clause after the blank
Read the part after the blank:
"the essays combine scientific research with personal reflections, offering readers both data and narrative insight."
This also has a subject ("the essays") and a verb ("combine") and forms a complete idea, so it is another independent clause.
Decide what punctuation is needed between two independent clauses
When you have two independent clauses next to each other without a joining word like "and" or "but," they must be separated by either:
- a period (starting a new sentence with a capital letter), or
- a semicolon, which links two closely related complete sentences.
A single comma without a coordinating conjunction is not correct, and using "and" requires parallel structure on both sides of "and."
Test each answer choice
Now apply that to the options:
- A) health. the creates: "...on public health. the essays combine..." A period is followed by a lowercase "the," which breaks the rules of Standard English capitalization.
- B) health and the creates: "...on public health and the essays combine..." This incorrectly joins a noun phrase ("public health") with a full clause ("the essays combine..."), so the structure is ungrammatical.
- D) health, the creates: "...on public health, the essays combine..." This is a comma splice, incorrectly joining two independent clauses with just a comma.
Only C) health; the correctly joins the two independent clauses with a semicolon and keeps the lowercase "the" because it continues the same sentence. So the correct answer is C) health; the.