Sentence Patterns
Sentence Patterns
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Examples
Subject + Verb
(SV)
Edward laughed.
The baby crawls and coos.
Spring rain and flowers abound.
Notes
Complement = a word or group of words
that describe or rename the subject.
follow a linking verb.
2 kinds of subject complements:
(i) Predicate nominative = noun or pronoun
Notes
Indirect Object = tells for whom or to whom
*If the IO comes after the DO (in a prepositional phrase to or
for), the sentence pattern is shown as S-V-DO-IO.
*Pronouns are usually used as indirect objects, but not always.
DO
IO in prepositional phrase
Clause
Structure
Connector Examples
s
Simple
1 IC
SV
None
Compoun
d
2 ICs
SV, and SV
FANBOYS
(for, and,
nor, but,
or, yet, so)
However,
moreover,
therefore
SV;
however,
SV
Clause
Structure
Connector
s
Examples
Complex
1 IC +
1 DCs
SV because
SV
Always at
the
beginning
of the DC
He recommends them
highly because they
taste like chicken
when they are hot.
Show how
the DC is
related to
the IC.
Although chicken
always appeals to me,
I still feel sceptical
about monkey.
Although
SV, SV
S, because
SV, V
Clause
Structure
Connector Examples
s
Compoun
d-complex
2 ICs +
1 DC
SV, and SV
because SV
Same as
John said that he
Pattern 2 & would share the
3.
secret recipe;
however, if he
does, Jane will feed
him to the
piranhas, so we are
both safer and
happier if I dont
eat monkeys or
steal recipes.
As a result of
SV, SV, but
SV.
References
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville 2015, Basic Sentence
Patterns Module#1, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, viewed
1 September 2015,
<http://www.siue.edu/lss/writing/modules/sentence_patterns.shtml
>.
The Writing Center n.d., Five Basic Structures of Simple Sentences,
The Writing Center of UMT, viewed 31 August 2015,
<http://www.umt.edu/writingcenter/docs/resourcesforwriters/fivestru
ctures.pdf>.
The Writing Center 2012, Sentence Pattern, The Writing Center at
UNC Chapel Hill, viewed 31 August 2015,
<http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/sentence-patterns/>.