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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 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? Fragment – How could you make it a complete sentence? Rewrite these fragments as complete sentences with correct capitalization and punctuation.
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).
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.
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
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.
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.