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Four sentence structures

Four sentence structures

Assessment

Presentation

English

4th Grade

Practice Problem

Easy

CCSS
L.2.1F, L.3.1I, L.1.1J

+4

Standards-aligned

Created by

Maria Escarcega

Used 2+ times

FREE Resource

6 Slides • 4 Questions

1

​Four Sentence Structure

By Maria Escarcega

2

What is a sentence?

A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. Every sentence needs:

  • A subject (who or what the sentence is about)

  • A predicate (what the subject is doing or being)

  • A complete thought that makes sense on its own

Remember: A sentence always starts with a capital letter and ends with a punctuation mark (period, question mark, or exclamation point).

3

Simple Sentences

A simple sentence has ONE independent clause (one subject and one predicate).

Examples:

  • Max runs fast.

  • The yellow bird sang beautifully.

  • My friend and I played basketball yesterday.

Notice that even though some of these sentences have more details, they still only have one subject-predicate pair.

4

Open Ended

Try it: Write your own simple sentence about your favorite activity!

5

Compound Sentences

A compound sentence has TWO or more independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) with a comma.

Examples:

  • I like pizza, but my sister prefers pasta.

  • The dog barked loudly, so the mailman ran away.

  • We can go to the park, or we can watch a movie.

Remember: You need a comma before the coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence.

6

Open Ended

Try it: Write your own compound sentence:

7

Complex Sentences

A complex sentence has ONE independent clause and at least ONE dependent clause.

Independent clause = complete thought that can stand alone Dependent clause = not a complete thought, starts with words like: when, because, if, although, since

Examples:

  • When it rains, we play board games inside.

  • I finished my homework because I wanted to watch TV.

  • Although she was tired, she helped her mom cook dinner.

8

Open Ended

Try it: Write your own complex sentence:

9

Compound - Complex Sentences

A compound-complex sentence has TWO or more independent clauses AND at least ONE dependent clause.

Examples:

  • When the bell rang, the students grabbed their backpacks, and they rushed to the playground.

  • I love swimming, but I don't like diving because I'm afraid of heights.

  • If you finish your work early, you can read a book, or you can help others with their assignments.

10

Open Ended

Try it: Write your own compound-complex sentence:

​Four Sentence Structure

By Maria Escarcega

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