Sentence fragment

6
08/25/22 1 SENTENCE FRAGMENT ENGLISH COMPREHENSION AND COMPOSITOIN Course Supervisor: Ayyaz Qadeer

description

 

Transcript of Sentence fragment

Page 1: Sentence fragment

04/10/23 1

SENTENCE FRAGMENT

ENGLISH COMPREHENSION

AND COMPOSITOIN

Course Supervisor: Ayyaz Qadeer

Page 2: Sentence fragment

Introduction

A sentence fragment tries its best to be a sentence, but it just can’t make it. It’s missing something.

Often, it’s missing a verb or part of a verb string:

John working extra hard on his hook shot lately.

Here, for instance, we’re missing an auxiliary — has been, in this case, probably — that would complete the verb string and the sentence.

Page 3: Sentence fragment

Incomplete Verb, Part Two

A sentence fragment tries its best to be a sentence, but it just can’t make it. It’s missing something.

Spending hours every day after school and even on weekends.

This time we’re missing a whole verb. “Spending” is a participle wanting to modify something, but there is no subject-verb relationship within the sentence.

Often, it’s missing a verb or part of a verb string:

Page 4: Sentence fragment

Avoiding Sentence Fragments

Sometimes a sentence fragment can give you a great deal of information, but it’s still not a complete sentence:

After the coach encouraged him so much last year and he seemed to improve with each passing game.

Here we have a subject-verb relationship — in fact, we have two of them — but the entire clause is subordinated by the dependent word after. We have no independent clause.

Page 5: Sentence fragment

Avoiding Sentence Fragments

Be alert for strings of prepositional phrases that never get around to establishing a subject-verb relationship:

Immediately after the founding of the college and during those early years as the predominant educational institution in the American Midwest.

Again, be careful of sentences which give their share of information but still don’t contain a subject and verb.

Page 6: Sentence fragment

This PowerPoint presentation was created by

Charles Darling, PhD

Professor of English and Webmaster

Capital Community College

Hartford, Connecticut

copyright November 1999

Sadiq ur rehman *