Sentence Structure: Simple, Compound, Complex, Compound-Complex Sentences
Simple Sentence (Independent Clause)
Contains a subject and a verb and forms a complete thought Example: She ate the cheeseburger.
Subordinating conjunctions (AAAWWUUBBIS)
Introduce a subordinate (dependent) clause After, As, Although, When, While, Unless Until, Because, Before, If, and Since
Coordinating Conjunctions (FANBOYS)
Join together words, phrases, or clauses: For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So
Compound Sentence
Two independent clauses joined together by a comma and a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS) Example: She ate the cheeseburger, AND he ate the fries.
Relative Pronouns
Also introduce subordinate (dependent) clauses That , Which, Who, Whom, and Whose.
Compound Sentence
Example: They went to Disney World, and they watched the fireworks from Cinderella's castle.
Compound-Complex Sentence
Example: We wanted to go to Disney World, but we couldn't because it was raining too hard.
Complex Sentence
Example: When they went to Disney World, they saw all the princesses.
Dependent (Subordinate) Clause
Has both a subject and a verb but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence; begins with a subordinate conjunction (AAAWWUUBBIS) or relative pronoun (That, Which, Who, Whom, Whose)
Complex Sentence
Has one or more dependent clauses and one independent clause Example: After we went shopping, we went to Starbucks for coffee.
Compound-Complex Sentence
Has two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses Example: After we went shopping, we went to Starbucks, and we ordered two pumpkin spice lattes.