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Lesson 1

Lesson 1. Declarative and Interrogative Sentences. Complete sentence because it expresses a complete thought. Sentence fragment because it does not have a subject. It does not tell who swam in the pool. Complete sentence. Fragment – How could you make it a complete sentence?.

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Lesson 1

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  1. Lesson 1 Declarative and Interrogative Sentences

  2. Complete sentence because it expresses a complete thought. Sentence fragment because it does not have a subject. It does not tell who swam in the pool. Complete sentence. Fragment – How could you make it a complete sentence? Fragment – How could you make it a complete sentence? Rewrite these fragments as complete sentences with correct capitalization and punctuation.

  3. Tell whether sentences are fragments or declarative sentences and how you know. Declarative sentence because it has a subject (who or what did) and a predicate (what is or has happened). Fragment because it does not have a predicate to say what happened. Declarative sentence because it has a subject (who or what did) and a predicate (what is or has happened). Declarative sentence because it has a subject (who or what did) and a predicate (what is or has happened).

  4. Turn the fragments below into declarative sentences. • ate pizza We ate pizza. • Sue’s dog Sue’s dog is brown. • to the store I went to the store.

  5. Tell whether sentences are fragments or interrogative sentences. If it is a fragment, turn it into a complete interrogative sentence. Have you been to the new mall? How did he know I got $5.00 from the Tooth Fair? Complete Interrogative Sentence

  6. Create an interrogative sentence for the following declarative sentence. • Carlos walks to school. Does Carlos walk to school? • Write 2 declarative sentences. • Write 2 interrogative sentences.

  7. A declarative sentence ends with a period. • An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark. • Write a description of your favorite food. • Write questions you would ask about a friend’s favorite food.

  8. The End!!!

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