Sentence Structure
complete subject
Includes all the words that tell whom or what the sentence is about ex: THE BOY NEXT TO HER stood in line.
prepositional phrase
a group of words that begins with a preposition and ends with an object and any modifiers ex: There's a hole IN THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA
dependent clause
a group of words with a subject and verb that cannot stand alone ex: ALTHOUGH HE ENJOYED SOCCER, he did not try out for the team
object
a noun or pronoun ex: Mrs. O is in her CLASSROOM.
semicolon
a punctuation mark (';') used to connect independent clauses
complex sentence
a sentence that has a dependent clause and an independent clause
simple sentence
a sentence that has one subject and one verb
3 things every sentence must have
a subject, a verb and a complete thought
conjunction
a word that joins two phrases or sentences ex: FANBOYS- for, and, but, or, yet, so
preposition
a word that relates an object to another word in the sentence ex: Mrs. O is IN her classroom.
verb
a word that shows action; same as a simple predicate The boy ATE an apple
pronoun
a word that takes the place of a noun ex: he, she, they, it
fragment
a word, phrase, or clause that does not form a full sentence ex: When I went to the store.
complete predicate
consists of a verb and all the words that describe the verb and complete its meaning ex: The boy next to her STOOD IN LINE.
adjective
describes a noun ex: tall, thin, ignorant
independent clause
expresses a complete thought and can stand by itself as a sentence THE BOY ATE AN APPLE, but HE DIDN'T LIKE IT.
predicate
tells what the subject is or does The boy ATE AN APPLE
FANBOYS
the coordinating conjuctions FOR, AND, NOR, BUT, OR, YET, SO
simple predicate
the main word or word group that tells something about the subject ex: The boy next to her STOOD in line
simple subject
the main word or words in the complete subject ex: The BOY next to her stood in line
interjection
A word that expresses emotion ex: Wow!
adverb
A word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb; often ends in 'ly' ex: He QUICKLY ran to his sister to help her.
noun
person, place, thing, or idea
compound object
two or more objects that share the same preposition ex: You will see the field beyond the CARS and FENCE.
compound verb
two or more verbs that have the same subject and are joined by a conjunction such as and or or ex: Maria WENT to the hospital to VISIT her grandmother.
compound sentence
two sentences (independent clauses) joined together with a comma and a conjunction or semicolon
subject
who or what the sentence is about The BOY ate an apple.