1 / 15

Complete and Incomplete Sentences

Complete and Incomplete Sentences. A complete sentence is a group of words that tells a complete idea. A complete sentence answers these questions: Who/What? and What is it doing?. Example of a Complete Sentence :. The dog ate his bone. Who?. The dog. What did he do?. Ate his bone.

Télécharger la présentation

Complete and Incomplete Sentences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Complete and Incomplete Sentences

  2. A complete sentence is a group of words that tells a complete idea. A complete sentence answers these questions: Who/What? and What is it doing?

  3. Example of aComplete Sentence: The dog ate his bone. Who? The dog What did he do? Ate his bone We can answer our two questions Who? and What did he do? So this is a complete sentence!

  4. Example of anIncomplete Sentence: The big hairy spider. The big hairy spider Who/What? We don’t know! This is not a complete sentence! What did it do? TIP: Just because a group of words begins with a capital and ends with a period doesn’t mean it is a complete sentence!

  5. A complete sentence answers these questions:Who/What? and What is it doing? Who/What? = Subject What is it doing? = Predicate

  6. Who/What? = Subject Noun or Pronoun What is it doing? = Predicate Verb Example: My mom made pizza for dinner.

  7. Who/What? = Subject Noun or Pronoun What is it doing? = Predicate Verb Example: The kids were bored from the power outage.

  8. Let’s Watch a Video • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdUXxdmhIsw

  9. Complete or Incomplete?That is the question! The bird flew back to the nest. The bird Who/What? What did it do? Flew back to the nest sentence! This is a COMPLETE

  10. Complete or Incomplete?That is the question! Is flapping in the wind. Who/What? We don’t know! This is not a complete sentence! What is it doing? Flapping in the wind TIP: Just because a group of words begins with a capital and ends with a period doesn’t mean it is a complete sentence!

  11. Complete or Incomplete?That is the question! The kitten played with the yarn. The kitten Who/What? What did it do? Played with the yarn sentence! This is a COMPLETE

  12. Complete or Incomplete?That is the question! The basket of food The basket of food Who/What? What is it doing? We don’t know! This is not a complete sentence! TIP: Just because a group of words begins with a capital and ends with a period doesn’t mean it is a complete sentence!

  13. Subject and PredicateFind them! The boy hurried to school. Who/What? (Noun) The boy hurried to school. What did he do? (Verb) sentence! This is a COMPLETE

  14. Subject and PredicateFind them! The waves at the beach were huge! Who/What? (Noun) The waves at the beach What did they do? (Verb) were huge. TIP: Sometimes the verb is a BEING verb! Those count too!

  15. What is a complete sentence? A complete sentence is a group of words that tells a complete idea. The subject tells who or what. The predicate tells what it is doing. The End

More Related