A sentence is a group of words that are joined together to mean something. A sentence is the basic unit of language. It expresses a complete thought. It does this by following the grammatical basic rules of syntax. For example: "Ram is walking".

A complete sentence has at least a subject and a main verb to state (declare) a complete thought. Short example: She walks. A subject is the noun (name) which is doing the main verb. The main verb is the activity that the subject is doing.

In English and many other languages, the first word of a written sentence has a capital letter. At the end of the sentence there is a punctuation mark depending on whether it is a statement, a question, a command, a request or an exclamation.[1]

Phrases and clauses

[change | change source]

A phrase or clause is part of a sentence.[2]p773–777

This is an example of a sentence:

In this sentence, 'The dog' is the subject, and 'is' is the verb.

This is an example of a phrase:

There is no verb, so we do not know anything about what the happy dog is doing. Therefore, it is not a sentence.

A clause is a sentence within a sentence. Example:

Types of sentence

[change | change source]

Sentences have different purposes:

Basic English sentences

[change | change source]

Here are some sentences written in Basic English:

The sky is blue.

Today is Monday.

Tomorrow is Tuesday.

The baby is smiling.

Sheila is reading a book.

This is the road to take.

Read a book about the history of America.

There are beautiful flowers growing in the garden.

The cushions are new and I feel the comfort they give me.

They are playing in the grounds.

[change | change source]

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Parts of Sentence". GrammarWord. Archived from the original on 7 March 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
  2. 2.0 2.1 McArthur, Tom (ed) 1992. The Oxford companion to the English language. Oxford University Press.

TYpes of sentences worksheet