4.1 Basic Sentence Structure

Preview

This section covers the following topics:

  • subjects, verbs, and objects
  • phrases and clauses
  • fragments

Writing is basically a system of structures.  Words connect to form phrases, clauses and, eventually, sentences.  Then, sentences connect to form paragraphs, and paragraphs connect to create essays, stories, letters, and reports.

This chapter looks at how we put words together into sentences.

Sentence Structure

A sentence is defined as a group of words that has a subject and a verb and express a complete thought.  Some sentences are brief and others are complex, but those three criteria are the basic requirements for a sentence.

subject + verb + complete thought = sentence

The subject of the sentence is always a noun or a pronoun.  It is who or what performs the action.  The verb tells what happened to the subject or what state the subject is in.  For example:

Samantha sleeps.  (The proper noun “Samantha” is performing the action so she is the subject of the sentence, and “sleeps” is the verb, the action she is performing.)

To find the subject of a sentence, first find all the nouns and pronouns.  Then ask yourself which noun or pronoun is performing the action.  For example:

Samantha often sleeps on the sofa.  (The nouns in that sentence are “Samantha” and “sofa.”  But which noun is performing the action?  “Samantha” is sleeping, so “Samantha” is the subject.)

The subject is often at the beginning of the sentence, but sometimes it isn’t.  For example:

After dinner, Alice served cake. (“Alice” is the subject and “served” is the verb; “After dinner” is a prepositional phrase that tells us when the action happened.)

Sometimes sentences have two subjects. For example:

Alice and Juan walked to school.  (“Alice” and “Juan” are the subjects; they both did the action.  The word “and” isn’t part of the subject; it is a conjunction that joins the two subjects.)

Sentences can also have more than one verb. For example:

Samantha studies at her desk, sleeps on the couch, and drives to school.  (Samantha does three things:  “studies,” “sleeps,” and “drives.”  All three of those words are verbs.)

Exercise 1 Instructions

  • In the activity below work your way through the slides.
  •  Each slides asks you to identify a part of a sentence:
    • nouns and pronouns
    • sentence subject.
    •  verb – what is the subject doing?
  • Remember that a sentence can have more than one subject and more than one verb.
  • For example:  Martie and Mitch spend time in the garden every weekend.
  • The words you select will be highlighted.
  • Select the Check button to check you answers.

Exercise 1 Activity

Tip

  • Think of “dependent” as a child who relies on her parents for help.  A dependent clause is not a sentence; it cannot survive alone.
  • A clause is “independent,” like a child who moves out of the house and gets a job.  It can stand on its own.

Phrases and Clauses

Groups of words are called “phrases” or “clauses.”  (Remember that in Ch. 3 we studied one type of phrase:  a prepositional phrase.)

A phrase is a group of words that does not contain a sentence subject or verb.  For example:

  • in the kitchen
  • the long and winding road

A clause is a group of words that does contain a subject and verb.  For example:

  • Luisa cooked lasagna.
  • the journey includes

There are two types of clauses:

  • Dependent clauses need further information to make a complete sentence.  For example: “the journey includes” has a subject and a verb but it does not express a complete thought.  It is a dependent clause.
  • Independent clauses do not need additional information to stand on their own.  For example, “Luisa cooked lasagna” has a subject and a verb, and it expresses a complete thought.  It is an independent clause.  Another name for an independent clause is “a sentence.”

Building Longer Sentences

Obviously, most sentences are not as simple as a noun plus a verb: “Eugenio helped.”  But writers build on this basic structure.

One way sentences grow is by adding an “object.”

subject + verb + object

The object of a sentence is the noun or pronoun affected by the action of the verb. In other words, the subject is the person or thing doing something; the object is having something done to it.  For example:

Alice baked a cake. (“Alice” is the subject; she is doing the action of baking.  “baked” is the action being done by Alice; it is the verb.  “cake” received the action of the verb; it is the object in this sentence.)

Adding prepositional phrases is another way to build more complex sentences.  For example:

Samantha is a good student who studies from 6 to 9 p.m. every day and often she will fall asleep on the sofa with a book in her lap.

“from 6 to 9 p.m.,” “on the sofa,” “with a book” and “in her lap” are all prepositional phrases; they add information about where and when to the sentence.

Experienced writers often write complex sentences, but a sentence is not good just because it is long.  It is important not to overload sentences.  For example:

The treasure lay buried under the old oak tree, behind the crumbling fifteenth-century wall, near the schoolyard where children played merrily during their lunch hour, unaware of the riches that remained hidden beneath their feet.

If a sentence is cluttered, divide it into two shorter sentences:

The treasure lay buried under the old oak tree, behind the crumbling fifteenth-century wall.  In the nearby schoolyard, children played merrily during their lunch hour, unaware of the riches that remained hidden beneath their feet.

Dissecting a sentence is like dissecting a frog in science class.  We are opening it up and looking at the parts, giving each part a name and figuring out how the parts work together, with the goal of understanding how the frog works.  Digging into the anatomy of language can be as interesting as when other people dig into the anatomy of a political movement, or a car engine, or a piece of music.

Avoiding Fragments

One of the benefits to understanding sentence structure is the ability to identify fragments.  It is easier to avoid fragments if you know how a sentence is built.

Remember that a complete sentence requires three things: a subject, a verb, and a complete thought.  “Samantha sleeps,” fulfills those requirements.  It has a subject “Samantha,” a verb “sleeps,” and it expresses a complete thought.  Even though it is short, it is a complete sentence.

A fragment is an incomplete sentence.

It may be missing a subject.  For example:

Went to the movies last weekend.  (Who went to the movies? The subject is missing.)

Or a fragment may be missing a verb.  For example:

The statue damaged during the riots. (“damaged” is not a verb; it’s an adjective that describes the noun “statue.”  Without a verb, this is a fragment.)

Or a fragment may have both a subject and a verb, but not express a complete thought.  For example:

If she feels like going. (This has a subject “she” and a verb “feels.”  But the point is unfinished.)

To fix fragments, add what is missing.  For example:

  • “Went to the movies last weekend” + subject = Massimo went to the movies last weekend.
  • “The statue damaged during the riots” + verb = The statue damaged during the riots was a symbol of racism.
  • “If she feels like going” + complete thought = If she feels like going, let her.

Exercise 2 – Instructions

  • Identify the complete sentences.
  • Don’t guess. Look for subjects and verbs, then make sure the sentence expresses a complete thought.
  • Select the Check button to check you answers.

Exercise 2 – Activity

Takeaways

  • A sentence is a group of words with a subject, a verb, and a complete thought.
  • Groups of words are called phrases or clauses.  There are two types of clauses: dependent and independent.
  • Adding prepositional phrases and objects makes a sentence more complex.
  • Understanding how a sentence is constructed will help you avoid errors such as fragments.
definition

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

1, 2, 3 Write! Copyright © 2020 by Gay Monteverde is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.