Lesson 1 - Understanding Sentences

Tennessee Blueprint 5th Grade

Assessed - Select the best way to correct incomplete sentences within context.


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In this lesson you will learn to rewrite sentence fragments into complete sentences.





 


What is a sentence?


A sentence is a group of words that has a complete thought. A sentence can stand alone with no other sentences around it and make sense.



Which group of words contains a complete thought?



  1. I found some slick little trails out in the garden down under some tall hollyhocks.

  2. Once I decided to make friends with him.

  3. Thinking they were game trails.

  4. Mama had another talk with Papa.



The main parts of a sentence are the subject and the predicate. The subject tells who does the action, and the predicate contains the verb and tells what the action is.



Tell which part of the sentence (subject or predicate) is missing in each group of words below.



  1. A whole bucketful of tears.

  2. My dog-wanting.

  3. Bawling and yelling for Mama.

  4. Had a talk with him.



All sentences begin with capital letters and end with punctuation - period, question mark, or exclamation point.


If you have a group of words that does not contain a complete thought or is missing the subject, verb, or both then you
have a sentence fragment.


Understanding sentence fragment errors may help you avoid making them. Here are some common mistakes: