Do it well.don't do it at all.
(Change into compound sentence)
Answers
Answer:
do it well.don't do it at all
Answer:
Do it well or don't do it at all is the required compound sentence.
Explanation:
Coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, still, or so) plus a comma, or a semicolon alone can be used to combine two independent clauses to form a compound sentence. The independent clause in the simple phrase has one subject and one verb. "Katniss can survive in the forest," for instance. As previously mentioned, a compound sentence consists of two or more distinct clauses connected by a comma, semicolon, or conjunction. At least two separate clauses must be present in a compound sentence. Since there are no dependent clauses and both clauses have subjects and verbs that make sense on their own, we can conclude that this phrase is a compound one. A sentence is considered to be simple rather than compound if it just has one independent clause. When you start adding dependent clauses, a sentence that already has three or more independent clauses becomes a compound-complex sentence.
Thus, a sentence that has at least two independent clauses but no dependent clauses are referred to as a compound sentence.