Fragments and Commas: Fragments and Commas are commas.
Taking
on the intellectual challenges of my previous engineering roles, competition is what inspires me most. I enjoy learning a skill through experiment and then practicing it again. Be it, out-manoeuvring an astute opponent at the poker table or executing a text-book cover drive in a cricket match. There’s a rule that will drive you across the entire field. Be it, -Making your debut at the poker table in a Chinese match.
Und
I scored exceptionally well on experimental modules that required significant academic writing. Writings, such as how an attorney would explain problems with the prior art that an invention is aiming to solve.
Is the paragraph ending with the same sentence as the last sentence? If the data itself makes no sense by its own, then somehow the data itself is useless. Why the previous sentence. Why it’s important. Is it too easy to take a word “fracture” too literally?
Is it right to place the commas in the last sentence of a paragraph? Since “Be it” is an introduction (as I always do in my first paragraph), why does it write a comma? When I put an independent and a dependent clause in the second question, I feel there should be a singular before “similar”, but instead we have a comma followed by an independent clause?
What is really important to you now?