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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 |
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Interrogative |
A question that ends with a question mark. Example: Have you red the book Peter Pan? |
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Exclamatory |
A sentence that shows strong feelings and ends with a exclamation mark. Example: What fun Peter had! |
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Imperative |
A command that ends with a period. Example: Tell me about the movie. |
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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) |
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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. |
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Run-on Sentence |
A run-on sentence is two or more sentences incorrectly written as on sentence. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |