Elements of Sentence Construction
Elements of Sentence Construction
Example:
Example:
Example:
Because we use such statements when we are talking directly to someone, we omit the
word you. It is understood in the sentence. Therefore, in statements like this one, we say the
subject is
Sometimes the predicate will be composed of two or three verbs that fit together - the main
verb preceded by one or more auxiliary (helping) verbs.
A subject and predicate may not always appear together or in the normal order, as the following
examples show:
Phrases
A phrase is a group of related words that
Examples:
Examples:
Even though these phrases contain nouns (pronouns) and/or verb forms, none of the
nouns/pronouns/verbs are subjects or predicates. None of them work as a partnership.
Also, these phrases do NOT express complete thoughts.
Clauses
Words and phrases can be put together to make clauses.
Note the difference between phrases and clauses in the following examples:
Compounding Sentence Elements
Words, phrases, and clauses may be joined to one another inside a sentence with a
conjunction.
WORDS
PHRASES
DEPENDENT CLAUSES
Avoiding Fragments
A complete sentence needs only two elements:
Writers make this error when they try to separate the two independent clauses in a
compound sentence with a comma alone.
A comma is not a strong enough punctuation mark to separate the two independent
clauses by itself; thus, using it causes the clauses to be spliced together.
Writers make this error by joining two independent clauses into a compound
sentence without using any punctuation between them.
No punctuation between the two independent clauses causes them to "fuse" into an
INCORRECT compound sentence.