Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

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Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659-60

Transcript of Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Page 1: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Sentence Fragments

Review in your text on pages 659-60

Page 2: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Use sentence fragments only for special emphasis.

A fragment is an incomplete sentence.A fragment may lack a subject or verbOr it may be only a dependent clause.

Page 3: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Test for sentence fragments

By taking the group of words out of context.If the group of words cannot stand by itself as a complete thought, it is a fragment.

Page 4: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Revise sentence fragments

By adding a subjectOr verbOr by combining the fragment with the previous sentence.

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Fragment:

I still remember the championship basketball game when I scored forty points. Breaking the existing conference record.

“Breaking the existing conference record” is not a complete sentence – it cannot stand by itself as a complete thought.

Page 6: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Revision:

I still remember the championship basketball game when I scored forty points. Breaking the existing conference record.

Becomes:I still remember the championship

basketball game when I broke the existing conference record by scoring forty points.

Page 7: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Or:

I still remember the championship basketball game when I scored forty points. Breaking the existing conference record.

Becomes:I still remember the championship

basketball game when I scored forty points, breaking the existing conference record.

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Fragment:

At home I enjoy many water sports. Waterskiing and sailing, which are my two favorites.

“Waterskiing and sailing, which are my two favorites” cannot stand by itself as a complete thought. Revise to make one complete sentence.

Page 9: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Revision:

At home I enjoy many water sports. Waterskiing and sailing, which are my two favorites.

Becomes:At home I enjoy many water sports,

but waterskiing and sailing are my favorites.

Page 10: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

Revision:

At home I enjoy many water sports. Waterskiing and sailing, which are my two favorites.

Becomes:At home I enjoy my two favorite

water sports: waterskiing and sailing.

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Fragment:

She stood in line for four hours in the freezing rain. To get tickets for the rock concert.

“To get tickets for the rock concert” is not a complete thought. Combine with the previous sentence.

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Revision:

She stood in line for four hours in the freezing rain. To get tickets for the rock concert.

Becomes:She stood in line for four hours in the

freezing rain to get tickets for the rock concert.

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Revision:

She stood in line for four hours in the freezing rain. To get tickets for the rock concert.

Becomes:To get tickets for the rock concert,

she stood in line for four hours in the freezing rain.

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Fragment:

After a tough class, I took a long shower, dried my hair, and put on my underwear. Then I walked into the living room. Because I thought no one was home. Was I surprised to discover my mother talking to Reverend Jones!

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“Because I thought no one was home” cannot stand by itself as a complete thought. It is a dependent clause or a fragment.

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Revision:

After a tough class, I took a long shower, dried my hair, and put on my underwear. Because I thought no one was home, I walked into the living room. Was I surprised to discover my mother talking to Reverend Jones!

Page 17: Sentence Fragments Review in your text on pages 659- 60.

For special emphasis, however

Sentence fragments can be used sparingly.

When the river was dammed almost all of these things were lost. Crowded out—or drowned and buried under mud. --Edward Abbey

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Head off? Decapitation cases are rather routinely handled. --Jessica Mitford

When I finally did fall asleep, I had that same hideous nightmare in which a woodchuck is trying to claim my prize at a raffle. Despair. --Woody Allen.