Sentence Is, 'This House Is Too Expensive, and That House Is Too Small.'
Sentence Is, 'This House Is Too Expensive, and That House Is Too Small.'
Sentence Is, 'This House Is Too Expensive, and That House Is Too Small.'
Kinds of Sentences
Good writers will use different kinds of sentences to make their writing interesting and
fluid. The text will sound choppy if too many simple sentences are used, and it will be
complicated and hard to read if too many long, complex sentences are used.
Following are explanations and examples of three types of sentences: simple, complex
and compound.
A simple sentence expresses a complete thought and contains a subject and a verb.
An example would be: “Mary went to the library to study.”
A simple sentence may have a compound subject, meaning more than one, but it is still
considered a simple sentence. An example is: “Jose and Brittany are getting married.”
A simple sentence can also have a compound verb, like: “Meaghan makes her bed and
brushes her teeth every morning.
A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.
A dependent clause has a subject and verb, but is not a complete thought, so it cannot
stand alone. These two clauses are joined by a marker word like: after, although, as, as
if, because, before, even if, even though, if, in order to, since, though, unless, until,
whatever, when, whenever, whether, and while. An example is: “He wasn't allowed to
go to the party until he did his chores.”
A compound sentence has two simple sentences, or independent clauses. The
clauses are connected in one of three ways:
With a coordinating conjunction. For example: "She ran quickly but still did not catch the
escaping puppy."
Note: A comma is not necessary before the conjunction if the second clause does not have a
subject before the second verb.
With correlatives (either-or, neither-nor, not only-but also, both-and): "Either the girl will catch
the puppy or the puppy will escape."
With a semicolon. For example: "The puppy has been waiting to go outside; finally the day has
arrived."
In this sentence 'I' is the subject, and 'will shop' is the predicate. The verb 'shop' is
helped by the auxiliary verb 'will,' and together they form the predicate.