Sentence Types
They are:
Simple Sentence
Compound Sentence
Complex Sentence
Compound-Complex sentence
Definition
A simple sentence is a sentence with one
independent clause.
Note what the definition does not say. It
doesn't say that a simple sentence is short or easy to understand. It doesn't
say anything about phrases. A simple sentence can have forty-seven phrases, but
only one independent clause.
Let's look at an example:
I love simple sentences.
(That's easy enough. It is obviously one independent
clause.)
But look at this:
Being an English teacher with a penchant for
syntactical complexity, I love simple sentences.
(It's longer, more challenging and contains bigger
words, but it's still a simple sentence. Being an English teacher with a
penchant for syntactical complexity" is a participial phrase. "With a
penchant" and "for syntactical complexity" are prepositional
phrases.)
Look at this:
Being an English teacher with a penchant for syntactical
complexity, I love to read simple sentences upon getting up and before going to
bed.
(Amazingly, it's still a simple sentence. I am piling
on phrase after phrase, but the sentence still contains only one independent
clause.)
Definition
A compound sentence
contains two or more independent clauses.
Example:
I love conjunctive adverbs, but my
students love each other.
(The independent clauses are in blue. This sentence
contains no dependent clauses)
Sometimes a compound sentence contains more than two
independent clauses.
Example:
I love conjunctive adverbs; my
students love each other, and we all love
holidays.
Sometimes longer linking words can be used.
Example:
I can name several conjunctive adverbs; consequently, my friends are impressed.
Definition
A complex sentence is a sentence that contains
one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.
Example:
Because life is complex, we need complex sentences.
(The independent clause is in blue. The dependent
clause is italicized.)
Example:
Because people know that I am an English teacher,they make allowances for how I
dress and what I say.
(This sentence contains four dependent clauses. The
independent clause is in blue. Note that two of the dependent clauses are
inside of and part of the independent clause. Don't be alarmed. That happens
all the time.)
Definition
A compound-complex
sentence contains two or more independent clauses and one or more dependent
clauses.
Example:
Because I am an English teacher, some people expect me to speak
perfectly, and other people expect me to write perfectly.
(The dependent clause is underlined, and the
independent clauses are in blue.)
Example:
Some people tell me that my grading is too tough,
and others tell me that my assignments are boring.
(The independent clauses are in blue. The dependent
clauses are italicized. Note that the dependent clauses occur within the
independent clauses. It often happens.)
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