Simple Sentence:
1 finite verb, 1
idea. Anna READS
a book
Complex Sentence:
One main clause,
another subordinate
clause which provide
additional
information, joined
by subordinating
conjunctions. Candy
received her results
while she was
recuperating in
hospital after she
had broken her leg.
Compound
Sentence: 2 or
more finite
verbs, 2 simple
sentences joined
by fanboy
conjunction. Dan
plays soccer at
school and works
on his computer.
Subject: who/what we talking about.
Predicate: rest of the sentence
Phrase: sentence without verb.
The girl entered the room,
HAPPILY AND CONFIDENTLY.
Main clause: main idea, can stand
alone. The van came to a halt,
after it had run out of petrol.
Subordinate clause: contains a
verb, cannot stand alone. (While
the engine was running), the man
jumped out the car.
Punctuation
Commas: list,
additional
information,
beginning one
phrase, end of
another. Comma
splice: A census
was taken, the
government
needed
statistics.
WRONG.
Semi Colons ;
long pause that
balances 2
important ideas,
indicates
opposite ideas,
joins sentences
when there is no
conjunction.
Colons : a list is
following, introduces a
quote, dialogue
Quotation marks ""
Direct speech,
quotations, titles of
books/movies.
Italics:
titles &
foreign
words
Ellipsis...
indicate
sentence is
incomplete,
something is
following
Parenthesis:
additional
information, also can
use commas/dashes
instead
Hyphen -
Links prefixes
to works,
linked to
words that
cannot be
completed on
1 line,
differenciate
meanings.