…also known as an INDEPENDENT CLAUSE

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Presentation transcript:

…also known as an INDEPENDENT CLAUSE The Sentence …also known as an INDEPENDENT CLAUSE

Write a sentence in your notebook

How do you know it is a sentence? What makes a sentence a sentence?

What makes a sentence a sentence? subject + verb = sentence A capital letter and period DO NOT make a sentence.

The core of any sentence is a subject and a verb. Who or what did something What they did A sentence must have a subject and a verb, and it must be a complete thought.

Let’s practice. The two word sentence...or not? He ran. She danced. They sang. Sit here. Forgive me. He laughed. Dogs bark. Dark clouds. Open up YES NO The two word sentence...or not?

Let’s take a longer sentence and make it a two word sentence. The lights cluster brilliantly up the street at Claudia’s house. Subject Verb Now try with the sentence you wrote. Is there a subject and a verb? Is your sentence a complete thought?

Find your own two-word sentences Keep your eyes open for them this week in your reading. When you think you find one, ask yourself these 2 questions to be sure there is a subject and a verb: - Who or what did something? - What did they do? Bring me the example. If it is correct, you can add it to our chart. This is a competition between 5th & 6th period!

Sentence Smack Down Get into groups of three. Each group will take a sentence. #1 will read entire sentence. #2 will smack down and announce the subject. # 3 will smack down and announce the verb. # 1 will read the whole sentence again.

…also known as a DEPENDENT CLAUSE The sentence fragment …also known as a DEPENDENT CLAUSE

What makes a sentence fragment? A fragment is created when a sentence does not have either a subject, a verb, or is not a complete thought. In other words, the fragment IS NOT a sentence; it is a PART of a sentence.

Let’s Practice and repair. As his dog ran after the mailman. Worrying that a meteor or chunk of space debris will conk her on the head. George had to explain why he had brought Squeeze, his seven-foot pet python, to Mr. Parker's English class. Such as rolling his eyes, smirking, reading books during teaching time, folding handouts into paper airplanes, and drawing caricatures on his desk.

Quiz Time Three of the following items are fragments. One item is a sentence. Circle the sentence. a. Over the hill beside the farm. b. Before class began, Mark visited his locker. c. The girl with the long, curly, blonde hair. d. Went to the grocery store with Grandma, Grandpa, and Willie. Three of the following items are sentences. One is a fragment. Circle the fragment. a. Ashley whistled. b. The girls jumped rope. c. They all watched. d. Too bad.

Fragment: Watched T.V. all day. Read the fragment below. Then add to the fragment to turn it into a sentence. Fragment: Watched T.V. all day.

The run-on sentence A run-on sentence is created when two or more independent clauses (sentences) are placed together without proper punctuation or connectors.

Examples I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. My grandma likes to go for long walks she lives near a park with a path.

I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. Ways to fix the run on Add a comma and coordinating conjunction Add a period and a capital letter I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. I love to write stories. I would write one everyday if I could. I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. I love to write stories, and I would write one everyday if I could.

I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. Ways to fix the run on Semicolon I love to write stories I would write one everyday if I could. I love to write stories; I would write one everyday if I could.

Let’s practice Ways to fix the run on Add a comma and coordinating conjunction Add a period and a capital letter My grandma likes to go for long walks she lives near a park with a path. My grandma likes to go for long walks she lives near a park with a path.

Let’s practice Ways to fix the run on Semicolon My grandma likes to go for long walks she lives near a park with a path.