Clause and Effect
FANBOYS Frenzy
Punctuation Panic
Say What?!...
The Sentence Games
100

What is a clause that can stand alone as a complete thought?

Independent Clause 

100

What does FANBOYS stand for?

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

100

Where should the comma go? “After school we went to the store.”

After “school”

100

What kind of sentence makes a statement?

Declarative 

100

What type of sentence has only one independent clause?

Simple Sentence 

200

What is a clause that begins with a subordinating conjunction and cannot stand alone?

Dependent Clause 

200

What punctuation should come before a FANBOYS conjunction when joining two independent clauses?

A comma

200

What is one reason you should use a comma?

To separate items in a list, clauses, or to set off introductory phrases

200

What type of sentence gives a command?

Imperative 

200

What type of sentence joins two independent clauses with a comma and a conjunction?

Compound

300

Identify the independent clause: “Because I was tired, I went to bed early.”

I went to bed early.
300

Fix this sentence: “I wanted to go to the park but it was raining.”

"I wanted to go to the park, but it was raining.”

300

Which words need to be capitalized? “my friend julia loves halloween.”

Julia and Halloween

300

Identify this type: “Can you pass the salt?”

Interrogative

300

Identify the sentence type: “Although it was raining, we went outside.”

Complex

400

True or False: Every sentence must have at least one dependent clause.

False. Every sentence needs an independent clause. 

400

Identify the conjunction in this sentence: “She wanted to go to the party, yet she stayed home to study.”

“Yet”

400

Fix the punctuation: “I wanted pizza, but my brother wanted tacos so we compromised.”

“I wanted pizza, but my brother wanted tacos, so we compromised.”

400

Identify this type: “Watch out for that snake!”

Exclamatory

400

Identify the sentence type: “I wanted to go to the movies, but I stayed home because I was tired.”

Compound-complex

500

Combine these into one sentence with both clause types: “I forgot my lunch. I wasn’t hungry anyway.”

Even though I forgot my lunch, I wasn't hungry anyway.

500

Write a compound sentence using the conjunction “nor.”

Example: “He didn’t call me, nor did he send a text.”

500

True or False: You should always use a comma before “because.” Explain.

False; only when it clarifies meaning. Example: “I didn’t go because I was sick” ≠ “I didn’t go, because I was sick.”

500

Create one sentence that is both imperative and exclamatory.

Example: “Don’t touch that hot pan!”

500

Create a compound-complex sentence using “because” and “but.”

Example: “I stayed home because I was tired, but my friends went to the concert.”

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