dentify the correct sentence.

A. Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Ave in Brooklyn, NY.

B. Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue in Brooklyn, NY.

C. Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue in Brooklyn, New York.

D. Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue, in Brooklyn, New York.

D

Sorry, no.

The correct sentence is D. Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue, in Brooklyn, New York.

To identify the correct sentence, we can look at the rules for capitalizing street names and state names. In this case, street names should be capitalized when they are full words (such as "Avenue") but not when they are abbreviations (such as "Ave"). State names should always be spelled out in full (such as "New York").

Let's analyze each option:

A. "Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Ave in Brooklyn, NY."
- The street name is abbreviated ("Ave") and the state name is abbreviated ("NY"). This is not the correct sentence.

B. "Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue in Brooklyn, NY."
- The street name is spelled out in full ("Avenue"), but the state name is still abbreviated ("NY"). This is not the correct sentence.

C. "Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue in Brooklyn, New York."
- Both the street name ("Avenue") and the state name ("New York") are spelled out in full. This is a correct sentence.

D. "Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue, in Brooklyn, New York."
- This sentence has the correct spelling of the street name ("Avenue") and state name ("New York"). However, there is an unnecessary comma between "Avenue" and "in Brooklyn". Therefore, this is not the correct sentence.

Based on the analysis, the correct sentence is option C: "Carla went to work at 248 Prospect Avenue in Brooklyn, New York."