Fragments (incomplete sentences)
A complete sentence has a subject and a verb. Revise the following text to eliminate sentence fragments:
What people eat depends a great deal on where and when they five. In part because of the availability of certain foods. And because food is connected with conventions and norms. Religious beliefs also affect diet. For example, the restriction for Orthodox Jews against eating meat and dairy products at the same meal. While for many years Catholics were not allowed to eat meat on Friday. What is really interesting is what people will eat. Without thinking it strange at all. Some foods that people ate in the past seeming particularly strange. A good example is cocken-trice, a medieval delicacy made up of half a suckling pig and half a chicken, sewn together baked, and decorated. Obviously, tastes change over time. Anyone who protests that tastes are more discriminating in this century needs to reconsider that claim. To take a closer look at other cultures. Eating habits vary greatly in different parts of the world. In some places, monkey brains being a delicacy. As are insects. "There's more than one way to skin a cat" is just a figure of speech, unless you five in Asia. Visitors to America, too, are surprised by variations in diet. Rattlesnake, pig lips, and raw shrimp. However, even entire groups of people may learn to appreciate foods that once seemed strange to them. Accepting that other cultures may have something worthwhile to offer to their dinner tables. Just as children learn to develop a taste for "adult" foods. There may be limits, though. Whether soy ice cream or sesame burgers become popular enough to be served at fast-food chains. Another old expression, "You are what you eat," a little more interesting and a little more ominous all the time.