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Question
consider the following passage from an online article with no page numbers: \famously, twitter began as a one-to-many sms broadcast service, so it imposed technical limits on how long a tweet could be. one of these limits was the 140-character length requirement. by keeping tweets under 140, twitter could tack a 20-character username into a text and keep within the 160-character sms text limit.\ —robinson meyer, \twitter (sort of, sometimes) expands the 140-character limit\ referring to the quotation above, click or tap on any sentence in the passage below that incorrectly punctuates or capitalizes quoted material. if the passage doesn’t contain any errors, click the
o errors\ button. in \twitter (sort of, sometimes) expands the 140-character limit,\ robinson meyer explains why a tweet is limited to 140 characters. meyer reports, \twitter began as a one-to-many sms broadcast service, so it imposed technical limits on how long a tweet could be.\ at the time, according to meyer, there was a \160-character sms text limit.\
To determine if there are punctuation or capitalization errors in quoted material, we analyze each sentence:
- The first sentence: "In 'Twitter (Sort of, Sometimes) Expands the 140 - Character Limit,' Robinson Meyer explains why a tweet is limited to 140 characters." - Correctly punctuates and capitalizes the quoted title.
- The second sentence: "Meyer reports, 'Twitter began as a one - to - many SMS broadcast service, so it imposed technical limits on how long a tweet could be.'" - Correctly punctuates and capitalizes the quoted content.
- The third sentence: "At the time, according to Meyer, there was a '160 - character SMS text limit.'" - Correctly punctuates and capitalizes the quoted content.
Since all sentences correctly punctuate and capitalize the quoted material, there are no errors.
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No Errors