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SUBJECT
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Once you have located the verb, find the subject.
The subject of a sentence is the "doer" of the being or action. In a
statement, it comes before the verb. In "He is happy," the subject is
"He." In "Jane walked to the bank," the subject is
"Jane." In "Tom is studying at home," the subject is
"Tom."
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PREDICATE
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In traditional grammar,
a predicate is one of the two
main parts of a sentence,
the other being the subject.
The predicate is said to modify
the subject. For the simple sentence "The apple is red," The apple acts as the subject, and is red acts as the predicate. The
predicate is much like a verb phrase.
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NOUN GROUP
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A noun phrase is either a single noun or pronoun or a group of words containing
a noun or a pronoun that function together as a noun or pronoun, as the subject or object of a verb.
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ADVERBIAL PHRASE
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An adverbial phrase is a group of related words
which play the role of an adverb.
Like all phrases,
an adverbial phrase does not include a subject
and a verb.
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PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE
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At the minimum, a prepositional phrase will begin
with a preposition and end with a noun,
pronoun,
gerund,
or clause,
the "object" of the preposition.
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Subordinate clause
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Both
of these are clauses, so both of these are groups of words with a subject and a
verb.
So,
how are they different?
Dependent clauses cannot stand alone, and independent clauses can stand alone.
That is the only difference.
Here
are some independent clauses:
I love my cat.
Computers are awesome!
Here
are some dependent clauses:
If I love my cat
Until computers are awesome
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VERBAL PHRASE
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Shopping at her favorite
stores, Samantha spent her entire paycheck. (The bolded
phrase is a participial phrase because it functions as an adjective modifying
Samantha.)
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CLAUSE, PRINCIPLE CLAUSE
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Clause principle clause
Basically,
a clause is a part of a sentence that contains both a subject and a verb whether
the clause is dependent or independent. An independent clause can
be a sentence all by itself; it needs nothing added to it. An independent
clause, then, can stand alone. A dependent clause never forms a complete
sentence by itself. A dependent clause needs, depends on, an independent
clause to complete the sentence. An dependent clause will sound odd and
unfinished by itself and that is because it is merely a sentence
fragment. It is highly unpleasant to read fragments. Fragments
leave the reader baffled because the reader wants the rest of the sentence and
the rest is not there!
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COORDINATING CLAUSE
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coordinate clause
–noun Grammar .
one
of two or more clauses of equal status in a sentence, especially when joined by
a coordinating conjunction, as either The
sun came out or
the ice started to melt in
The sun came out and the ice started to
melt.
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SUBORDINATE CLAUSE
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Basically,
a clause is a part of a sentence that contains both a subject and a verb whether
the clause is dependent or independent. An independent clause can
be a sentence all by itself; it needs nothing added to it. An independent
clause, then, can stand alone. A dependent clause never forms a complete
sentence by itself. A dependent clause needs, depends on, an independent
clause to complete the sentence. An dependent clause will sound odd and
unfinished by itself and that is because it is merely a sentence
fragment. It is highly unpleasant to read fragments. Fragments
leave the reader baffled because the reader wants the rest of the sentence and
the rest is not there!
These
are examples of dependent clauses forming sentence fragments. Notice how
odd they sound. Find the subjects and verbs in these dependent clauses.
The conjunctions have been put in italics.
1.
When the sorcerer cast the
spell.
2.
Since the troll lived under the
bridge.
3. Although the princess captured the ogre.
Coordinating clause
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DEFINITE ARTICLE
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(a,e,i,o,u)
Can I have an apple?
She is an English teacher.
the
= definite article (a specific object that both the person speaking and the
listener know)
The car over there is
fast.
The teacher is very good, isn't he?
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INDEFINITE ARTICLE
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a = indefinite article (not a
specific object, one of a number of the same objects) with consonants
She has a dog.
I work in a factory.
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Coordinate clause
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–noun Grammar .
one
of two or more clauses of equal status in a sentence, especially when joined by
a coordinating conjunction, as either The
sun came out or
the ice started to melt in
The sun came out and the ice started to
melt.
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