Here's an example of a complex sentence, "I burned dinner but not the cake." Or, "Weeds are easy to grow, and hard to kill."
I do not believe a comma is necessary in this sentence at all. In fact, if you were to insert a comma after the word grazed (as you maybe tempted to do) it could change the meaning of the sentence. If you meant the lions were oblivious of the presence of the gazelles, you would insert a comma after grazed. But if you meant the gazelles were oblivious of the presence of the lions, you would leave the comma out.
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Today most Native American people groups have received western culture and live in the American melting pot. Nonetheless, there are some that battle to protect their legacy and culture for future ages by living on reservations, saving oral custom, and taking an interest in ancestral move occasions.
The topic sentence is usually always in the first sentence of a paragraph. If you are meaning the book or any representations of the novel
Answer:
The answer is C. We went to dinner. Next, we went to the movies.
Explanation:
"Next" is the transitional word.