Sentences Types
Sentences Types
1. Simple Sentences
A simple sentence has the most basic elements that make it a sentence: a subject, a
verb, and a completed thought.
Examples of simple sentences include the following:
1. Joe waited for the train.
"Joe" = subject, "waited" = verb
2. The train was late.
"The train" = subject, "was" = verb
3. Mary and Samantha took the bus.
"Mary and Samantha" = compound subject, "took" = verb
4. I looked for Mary and Samantha at the bus station.
"I" = subject, "looked" = verb
5. Mary and Samantha arrived at the bus station early but waited until noon for the
bus.
"Mary and Samantha" = compound subject, "arrived" and "waited" = compound verb
Tip: If you use many simple sentences in an essay, you should consider revising
some of the sentences into compound or complex sentences (explained below).
The use of compound subjects, compound verbs, prepositional phrases (such as "at
the bus station"), and other elements help lengthen simple sentences, but simple
sentences often are short. The use of too many simple sentences can make writing
"choppy" and can prevent the writing from flowing smoothly.
A simple sentence can also be referred to as an independent clause. It is referred to
as "independent" because, while it might be part of a compound or complex sentence,
it can also stand by itself as a complete sentence.
2. Compound Sentences
A compound sentence refers to a sentence made up of two independent clauses (or
complete sentences) connected to one another with a coordinating conjunction.
Coordinating conjunctions are easy to remember if you think of the words "FAN
BOYS":
For,And,Nor,But,Or,Yet,So
Tip: If you rely heavily on compound sentences in an essay, you should consider
revising some of them into complex sentences (explained below).
Coordinating conjunctions are useful for connecting sentences, but compound
sentences often are overused. While coordinating conjunctions can indicate some type
of relationship between the two independent clauses in the sentence, they sometimes
do not indicate much of a relationship. The word "and," for example, only adds one
independent clause to another, without indicating how the two parts of a sentence are
logically related. Too many compound sentences that use "and" can weaken writing.
Clearer and more specific relationships can be established through the use of complex
sentences.
3. Complex Sentences
A complex sentence is made up of an independent clause and one or
more dependent clauses connected to it. A dependent clause is similar to an
independent clause, or complete sentence, but it lacks one of the elements that would
make it a complete sentence.
Examples of dependent clauses include the following:
because Mary and Samantha arrived at the bus station before noon
while he waited at the train station
after they left on the bus
A complex sentence joins an independent clause with one or more dependent clauses.
The dependent clauses can go first in the sentence, followed by the independent
clause, as in the following:
Tip: When the dependent clause comes first, a comma should be used to separate
the two clauses.
1. Because Mary and Samantha arrived at the bus station before noon, I did not see
them at the station.
2. While he waited at the train station, Joe realized that the train was late.
3. After they left on the bus, Mary and Samantha realized that Joe was waiting at the
train station.
Conversely, the independent clauses can go first in the sentence, followed by the
dependent clause, as in the following:
Tip: When the independent clause comes first, a comma should not be used to
separate the two clauses.
1. I did not see them at the station because Mary and Samantha arrived at the bus
station before noon.
2. Joe realized that the train was late while he waited at the train station.
3. Mary and Samantha realized that Joe was waiting at the train station after they left
on the bus.
Complex sentences are often more effective than compound sentences because a
complex sentence indicates clearer and more specific relationships between the main
parts of the sentence. The word "before," for instance, tells readers that one thing
occurs before another. A word such as "although" conveys a more complex
relationship than a word such as "and" conveys.
The term periodic sentence is used to refer to a complex sentence beginning with a dependent
clause and ending with an independent clause, as in "While he waited at the train station, Joe
realized that the train was late."
Periodic sentences can be especially effective because the completed thought occurs at the end
of it, so the first part of the sentence can build up to the meaning that comes at the end.
A RUN-ON SENTENCE OR COMMA SLICE has at least two parts, either one of
which can stand by itself (in other words, two independent clauses), but the two parts have
been stuck together instead of being properly connected.
It is important to realize that the length of a sentence really has nothing to do with
whether a sentence is a run-on or not; being a run-on is a structural error that can be even a
very short sentence:
When two independent clauses are connected by only a comma, they constitute a run-
on sentence that is called a comma-splice. The example just above (about the sunscreen) is
a comma-splice. When you use a comma to connect two independent clauses, it must be
accompanied by a little conjunction (and, but, for, nor, yet, or, so).
The sun is high, so put on some sunscreen.