How should the locations be punctuated in the sentence: ‘The conference has people who have come from Des Moines Iowa Sacramento California Alamo Tennessee and other places as well.’?
A. Des Moines Iowa, Sacramento California, Alamo Tennessee
B. Des Moines, Iowa: Sacramento, California: Alamo, Tennessee
C. Des Moines, Iowa, Sacramento, California, Alamo, Tennessee
D. Des Moines, Iowa; Sacramento, California; Alamo, Tennessee

Random Topics:
Wh-QuestionDefinite & Indefinite Pronoun & ConditionalsMust Vs Have toActive and PassivePresent Simple VS ContinuousHave to/Has toPast Simple - Present PerfectVocabulary and DefinitionsDemonstrative Pronouns and Verb TensesGrammar - Punctuation of SentencesOther quiz:
Grammar › ViewWhich category is the following sentence: “We’re learning how to play lacrosse in PE.”
A. temporary event which is not finished
B. routine
C. general fact
D. future event
Tenses › View
Differentiate between present progressive and present perfect progressive tense with examples.
A. Present progressive tense describes an action currently happening (e.g., ‘I am eating’), while present perfect progressive tense describes an action that started in the past and is still ongoing (e.g., ‘I have been eating’).
B. Present progressive tense describes an action that happened in the past (e.g., ‘I was eating’)
C. Present progressive tense describes an action that will happen in the future (e.g., ‘I will be eating’)
D. Present perfect progressive tense describes an action that happened in the past and is now completed (e.g., ‘I had been eating’)
Vocabulary › View(adj) not clear; uncertain
A. definite
B. doubtful
C. reliable
D. vivid
Gerund, Infinitive, Bare Verb › View
He made her ………………. the message
A. repeat
B. to repeat
C. repeating
