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Grammar Rules Guide
Parts of Speech
Syllables and Syllabication
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Flat Stanley in South Florida
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
The Maids From Hell
My Garden is a Park. Really.
On The Duty of Civil Disobedience
Pinocchio - The Tale of a Puppet
Through The Looking Glass
Walden
Walking
White Fang
The Constitution of The United States
The Declaration of Independence
The Gettysburg Address
The Magna Carta
The United States Bill of Rights
The Hunting of the Snark
The Song of Hiawatha
Paradise Lost
Walt Whitman Poetry Archive

 English Grammar For Dummies

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 The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation

 The Elements of Style

Sentence Fragments

Grammar Rules Guide - Chapter 33

A sentence fragment is a part of a sentence punctuated as if it were a complete sentence. It is a group of words that begins with a capital letter and ends with a period, exclamation point, or a question mark, but does not express a complete thought.

Phrases as Sentence Fragments

A word group is a sentence fragment if it lacks a subject.

Example:

Swam into the ocean.

Note: Sentences in the imperative mood (e.g., Swim into the ocean!) have, by convention, an understood you for a subject and are not considered fragments.

A word group is also a sentence fragment if it lacks a verb.

Example:

The white plastic chair.

A word group missing both a subject and a predicate is a sentence fragment.

Example:

As in the lives of many.

Clauses as Sentence Fragments

(Warning: These are only guidelines for spotting a sentence fragment, not hard and fast rules.)

One clue that a group of words may be a sentence fragment is that it begins with a subordinator. Often, when a group of words begins with a subordinator, it is a dependent clause, a clause that cannot stand alone as a sentence. Some common subordinators are: when. until, after, before, however, while, because, since, though, although, if, so that, so, and where.

Example:

Until the day is over.

Another clue is that the word group begins with a relative pronoun. Some common relative pronouns are: that, who, whose, whom, which, and when.

Example:

Whom Kelly had known since the third grade.

Using and Misusing Sentence Fragments

Students should understand that sentence fragments can be used in writing, but that they should be used rarely and cautiously. Pointing out these structures in literature read and written in class might be a good way to identify the difference between strong use of sentence fragments and weak sentence fragments.

Example:

Every life is many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-love. But always meeting ourselves. (James Joyce)

The last word group is a sentence fragment. A sentence fragment is used here for emphasis. In this example, the meaning of the fragment is clear.

It is very easy to misuse sentence fragments. The following piece of writing shows how this misuse can make writing unclear and disorganized.

Example:

It is my opinion that the baseball strike should end. A salary cap is not a bad idea. After all, the players receive huge salaries. More money than the president.

The last word group is a sentence fragment.

Grammar Rules Guide Index

Active and Passive Voice - Chapter 1
Adjective, Adverb, and Noun Clauses - Chapter 2
Adjectives - Chapter 3
Adverbs - Chapter 4
Appositives - Chapter 5
Auxiliary Verbs - Chapter 6
Common and Proper Nouns - Chapter 7
Comparatives and Superlatives - Chapter 8
Complements - Chapter 9
Conjunctions - Chapter 10
Conjunctive Adverbs - Chapter 11
Dangling Modifiers - Chapter 12
Direct and Indirect Objects - Chapter 13
Fused Sentences, Run-Ons, and Comma Splices - Chapter 14
Homophones - Chapter 15
Independent and Dependent Clauses - Chapter 16
Interjections - Chapter 17
Mass and Count Nouns - Chapter 18
Misplaced Modifiers - Chapter 19
Noun and Pronoun Case - Chapter 20
Noun and Verb Phrases - Chapter 21
Nouns - Chapter 22
Parallelism - Chapter 23
Perfect and Progressive Verb Forms - Chapter 24
Prepositional Phrases - Chapter 25
Prepositions - Chapter 26
Principal Parts of Verbs - Chapter 27
Pronoun and Antecedent Agreement - Chapter 28
Pronouns - Chapter 29
Regular and Irregular Verbs - Chapter 30
Relative Clauses - Chapter 31
Restrictive and Non-Restrictive Clauses - Chapter 32
Sentence Fragments - Chapter 33
Sentence Types - Chapter 34
Subjects and Predicates - Chapter 35
Verb Mood - Chapter 36
Verbals and Verbal Phrases - Chapter 37

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