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Types of sentences

Types of sentences. There are three main types of sentence. A simple sentence. A compound sentence. A complex sentence. Types of sentences. Simple sentence – one action. It contains a subject (the person or thing doing the action) and a verb (a doing word). The cat pounced.

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Types of sentences

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  1. Types of sentences • There are three main types of sentence. • A simple sentence. • A compound sentence. • A complex sentence.

  2. Types of sentences Simple sentence – one action. It contains a subject (the person or thing doing the action) and a verb (a doing word). The cat pounced. The mouse ran away.

  3. Types of sentences Compound sentence – usually more than one action going on. Two simple sentences, joined by “and” or “but”. The cat pounced but the mouse ran away.

  4. Types of sentences Complex sentence – a simple sentence plus a subordinate clause which adds information to the sentence. The clause cannot stand on its own as a sentence. Although the cat pounced, the mouse ran away.

  5. Types of sentences Clause Sentence This is the house that Jack built. This is the malt that lay in the house that Jack built. This is the rat that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built. This is the cat that chased the rat that ate the malt that lay in the house that Jack built.

  6. Types of sentences Does this make sense? “that Jack built.” It’s a clause, so it can’t stand on its own. It has no main verb. (The verb ‘built’ is secondary in this sentence.)

  7. Types of sentences The word ‘that’ tells use that a subordinate clause is on its way, and must be supported by the main part of the sentence – “This is the house.” “This is the house.” What is the main verb here?

  8. Types of sentences Look at the book you are reading at the moment, and identify: 3 simple sentences. 2 compound sentences. 1 complex sentence. In each case, show the main verb(s).

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