It all depends on what your sentence is. For example: I love to play outside when I get home from school it is good for your health. THAT would be considered a run-on sentence. So, really it all depends on puncuation and context.
You could have run longer.The reason is:"Ran" is the simple past tense: "Yesterday I ran all the way home.""Run" is the past participle: "You should have run." "The race has been run."
run
Sam will run, and run, and run.
No, that's not a run-on sentence. Technically, it's a simple sentence with a compound verb. It contains a single subject and three verbs. "You" is the subject of the sentence. The three verbs are "went," "ate" and "ate." In other words, there is one person doing three actions. Admittedly, it's not a very goodsentence, but it is grammatically correct.
in December 13,1987 babe Ruth made a huge home run.
My coach was quite surprised to see me hit a home run that day.
the intense desire to run away from home
His winning home run this year was a great climax to the season.
This is a run-on sentence and need to be rewritten.
run on sentence
A run-on sentence contains too much information that should be in two or more sentences. For example: She went home and changed her clothes then went out to the porch her friend was there they liked each other that was until they had a fight. A sentence fragment is incomplete, like She thought she... (what?).
She worked from home in a beautiful office. The actor decided to run for public office.
I am in 5th grade and I know a run on sentence it is a sentence with commas to separate your full sentence
I am in 5th grade and I know a run on sentence it is a sentence with commas to separate your full sentence
A run-on sentence.
A fragment is not a complete sentence, a run-on is a sentence that can be separated into two sentences