Respuesta :
the phrase that is punctuated correctly would be "Raul's new car, the color of a ripe tomato, sat in the driveway."
Answer:
Raul’s new car, the color of a ripe tomato, sat in the driveway.
Explanation:
Appositive phrases are phrases that rename, identify or give further information of another noun placed right beside it. They can be nonrestrictive, when they are not essential to the sentence, and therefore should be set off with commas, dashes or brackets, or restrictive, when they are essential to the meaning of the sentence.
In the sentence “Raul’s new car, the color of a ripe tomato, sat in the driveway,” the appositive phrase “the color of a ripe tomato” is nonrestrictive ( its information is not essential to understand the whole sentence) and it is punctuated correctly because it is set off with commas.