Their, There, They're
Plural & Possessive
Types of Sentences
Phrases and Clauses
Semi-Colons
100

Pointing to a location.

There

100

More than one "cat".

Cats

100

A sentence that contains one clause and one predicate

Simple

100

A group of words with a subject and a verb.

Clause

100

Semicolons joins these two types of clauses.

Independent Clauses

200

"______ going to be late!"

They're

200

The tail belonging to one dog.

Dog's

200

A sentence that makes a statment.

Declarative

200

A group of words acting as a noun, adjective, or adverb.

Phrase

200

Each letter of "FANBOYS"

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

300

"I like ______ new car."

Their

300

The toys belonging to three children.

Children's

300

A sentence combines two independent clauses with FANBOYS

Compound

300

This type of clause cannot stand alone.

Dependent (Clause)

300

It separates items in a list if they have _______.

Internal Commas

400
"_______ are many ways to cook eggs."

There

400

The plural form of "Cactus".

Cacti

400

A sentence with one independent and one dependent clause.

Complex

400

A phrase beginning with "in", "on", or "at". 

Prepositional Phrase

400

The punctuation that usually follows ";however".

Commas

500

"________ over ________ with ________ bags."

They're, There, Their

500

The boss of many employees (possessive).

Employees' boss

500

A sentence with two independent and one dependent clause.

Compound-Complex

500

A clause that starts with "who", "which", or "that".

Relative Clause

500

Is a semicolon stronger or weaker than a colon?

Weaker (Colons introduce; semicolons separate equal weights)

M
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