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10 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Declarative

A statement that ends with a period.


Example: James M. Barrie lived in England

Interrogative

A question that ends with a question mark.


Example: Have you red the book Peter Pan?

Exclamatory

A sentence that shows strong feelings and ends with a exclamation mark.


Example: What fun Peter had!

Imperative

A command that ends with a period.


Example: Tell me about the movie.

Sentence Fragment

A sentence that does not express a complete thought. It may be missing a subject, a predicate, or both.


Example: Paul Revere warned the people. (lacks a predicate)

Complete Subject




Complete Predicate

A complete subject includes all the words in the subject of a sentence.




A complete predicate includes all the words in the subject of a sentence.

Run-on Sentence

A run-on sentence is two or more sentences incorrectly written as on sentence.

Simple subject




Simple predicate

The main word or group of words in the complete subject.




The main word or group of words in the complete predicate.



Subject Part




Predicate Part

The subject part of a sentence names whom or what the sentence is about.




The predicate part of the sentence tells what the subject does or has. It can also describe what a subject is or like.

Compound Subject




Compound Predicate

A compound subject has two or more subjects that have the same predicate. The subjects are joined by and, or, or but.




A compound predicate has two or more verbs that have the same subject. The verbs are joined by and, or, or but.