Sentence Structure- Exercise

It’s recap time!

In terms of structure, sentences can be classified in four ways:

Simple —- One independent clause 

Compound —- At least two independent clauses

Complex —- An independent clause and at least one dependent clause

Compound-complex —- Two or more independent clauses and at least one dependent clause

This exercise will give you practice in identifying these four sentence structures.

The sentences in this exercise have been adapted from poems in two books by Shel Silverstein: Where the Sidewalk Ends (HarperCollins, 1974) and Falling Up (HarperCollins, 1996).

Identify each of the following sentences as simple, compound, complex, or compound-complex.

1) I made an airplane out of stone.

2) I put a piece of cantaloupe underneath the microscope.

3) Oaties stay oaty, and Wheat Chex stay floaty, and nothing can take the puff out of Puffed Rice.

4) While fishing in the blue lagoon, I caught a lovely silver fish.

5) They say if you step on a crack, you will break your mother’s back.

6) My voice was raspy, rough, and cracked.

7) I opened my eyes and looked up at the rain, and it dripped in my head and flowed into my brain.

8) They say that once in Zanzibar a boy stuck out his tongue so far that it reached the heavens and touched a star, which burned him rather badly.

9) I’m going to Camp Wonderful beside Lake Paradise across from Blissful Mountain in the Valley of the Nice.

10) I joke with the bats and have intimate chats with the cooties who crawl through my hair.

11) The animals snarled and screeched and growled and whinnied and whimpered and hooted and howled and gobbled up the whole ice cream stand.

12) The antlers of a standing moose, as everybody knows, are just the perfect place to hang your wet and drippy clothes.

13) We’ll walk with a walk that is measured and slow, and we’ll go where the chalk-white arrows go.

14) If I had a brontosaurus, I would name him Horace or Morris.

15) I am writing these poems from inside a lion, and it’s rather dark in here.

16) A piece of sky broke off and fell through the crack in the ceiling right into my soup.

17) The grungy, grumpy, grouchy Giant grew tired of his frowny pout and hired me and Lee to lift the corners of his crumblin’ mouth.

18) If you were only one inch tall, you’d ride a worm to school.

19) The traffic light simply would not turn green, so the people stopped to wait as the traffic rolled and the wind blew cold, and the hour grew dark and late.

Answer: 1) simple sentence 2) simple sentence 3) compound sentence 4) complex sentence 5) complex sentence 6) simple sentence 7) compound sentence 8) complex sentence 9) simple sentence 10) complex sentence 11) simple sentence 12) complex sentence 13) compound-complex sentence 14) complex sentence 15) compound sentence 16) simple sentence 17) simple sentence 18) complex sentence 19) compound-complex sentence

Types of Sentence Structure

 

Types of Sentence Structure

Remember that every clause is, in a sense, a miniature sentence. A simple sentences contains only a single clause, while a compound sentence, a complex sentence, or a compound-complex sentence contains at least two clauses.

Sentence_types

The Simple Sentence                        

The most basic type of sentence is the simple sentence, which contains only one clause. A simple sentence can be as short as one word:

ioEsgG

Examples of simple sentences:

a)      Some students like to study in the mornings.

b)      Juan and Arturo play football every afternoon.

c)       Alicia goes to the library and studies every day.

Simple sentence can contain compound subjects or compound verbs.

a)      Hazmira and Batrisya fight at the shooting venue.

b)      Batrisya goes to TSL library and studies every day.

moduleCOMMA16

Compound sentence

A compound sentence contains two independent clauses joined by a coordinator. The independent clauses can be joined in three ways

a)      Coordinating conjunctions. = for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so (FANBOYS)

b)      Conjunctive adverbs = also, besides, furthermore, however, on the other hand, otherwise, for example, accordingly

c)       Semicolon

Examples of Compound Sentences:

a)      America is a rich country, yet it has many poor people.

b)      The student did not come to class regularly; therefore, he is barred from taking the final exam

c)       My older brother studies law; my younger brother studies medicine.

ComplexSentence

Complex Sentence

A complex sentence has an independent clause joined by one or more dependent clauses. A complex sentence always has a subordinator such as because, since, after, although, or when or a relative pronoun such as that, who, or which.

Examples of Complex Sentences:

In the following complex sentences, subjects are in yellow, verbs are in green, and the subordinators and their commas (when required) are in red.

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