Which type of sentence is the following? It seems to be worse when he plays golf, it does not bother him when he bowls.

A) correct sentence
B) run-on sentence
C) sentence fragment
I answered A it seems to be fine.

No.

Could it be a run on then?

Yes, it's a run on.

The given sentence is actually a run-on sentence, so the correct answer would be B) run-on sentence.

A run-on sentence occurs when two or more independent clauses (complete thoughts) are joined together without proper punctuation or a coordinating conjunction. In this case, there are two independent clauses: "It seems to be worse when he plays golf" and "it does not bother him when he bowls." However, these clauses are not properly joined or separated, making it a run-on sentence.

To fix this run-on sentence, you have a few options. One way is to use a coordinating conjunction like "but" to join the clauses: "It seems to be worse when he plays golf, but it does not bother him when he bowls." Another option is to use a semicolon to separate the two independent clauses: "It seems to be worse when he plays golf; it does not bother him when he bowls." You could also make each clause a separate sentence: "It seems to be worse when he plays golf. It does not bother him when he bowls." These are just a few examples of how you can correct a run-on sentence.