Parts of Speech
Sentences
Punctuation
More Sentences
Common Mistakes
100

Names a person, place or thing. 

Noun

100

All sentences need these 4 things

Start with a capital letter, end with a punctuation mark, have a subject and predicate. 

100

This punctuation mark comes before a coordinating conjunction. 

Comma

100

This sentence is one complete thought. 

Simple Sentence

100

You should always start a sentence with a 

Capital letter 
200

A, an or the are

Articles

200

This punctuation mark goes after an exclamatory sentence. 

Exclamation Point

200

This punctuation mark is used with dialogue. 

Quotation Marks

200

This sentence has two independent clauses. 

Compound

200

This type of noun is always captalized

Proper Noun

300

Verb is to action or 

Linking

300

A sentence that asks a question and ends with a question mark.

Interrogative Sentence

300

This punctuation mark introduces a list.

Colon

300

This sentence contains one dependent clause and one independent clause. 

Complex Sentence 

300

If you have two sentences together without a comma and conjunction.

Run-on Sentence

400

This can modify another verb, adjective or adverb

Adverb

400

A sentence that ends with a period and is a statement

Declarative Sentence

400

This punctuation mark puts two simple sentences together - minus the coordinating conjunction.

Semicolon 

400

This sentence can have two subjects or two predicates, but is still just one thought.

Simple Sentence 

400

If you have a sentence without a predicate or subject. 

Sentence Fragment

500

List the seven coordinating conjunctions that follow a comma.

For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet So.

500

A sentence that ends with a period and give a command.

Imperative Sentence

500

The punctuation mark is used to show ownership. 

Apostrophe

500

This sentence has at least two of the following - independent or dependent clause. 

Compound Complex Sentence 

500

A possessive noun should always have 

An apostrophe
M
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n
u