Sentence or Fragment?
Name that Subject
Complete Subject or Predicate
Simple or Compound
Sentence, Fragment or Run-on
100
At the house with the porch.
Fragment
100
Three dogs and two cats ran through the woods.
Compound Subject: dogs, cats
100
Name Complete Subject: Three boys in the parking lot are screaming.
Three boys in the parking lot
100
Compound or Simple sentence: Annie and Jim are going to the zoo.
Simple
100
I am going.
Sentence
200
Come here.
Imperative sentence
200
The beautiful girl in the red dress sat down.
Simple subject: girl
200
Complete Predicate: Three boys in the parking lot are screaming at cars.
are screaming at cars
200

Simple or Compound Sentence: The dogs and cats run and play in the backyard.

Simple

200
Tomorrow I will go to practice she will go to school.
Run-on
300
The dog fell.
Sentence.
300

Clean your room right now.

You understood

300
Name the Simple Subject: The cat in the room ran under the sofa.
Cat
300
Compound Subject or Predicate: The red truck in the right lane ran the median and wrecked into a tree.
Compound predicate: ran wrecked
300
After school on Monday.
Fragment
400
Over the river and through the woods.
Fragment
400

Where is my watch?

Watch

400
Name the simple predicate: The dog in the street ran into the bedroom and under the bed.
ran
400
Simple or compound sentence: Erin looked up words; Krystyn write them down.
Compound
400
Saturday is the best day for playing football, while Sunday is the best day for watching football.
Sentence
500
I wish I had.
Fragment
500
The man who drives the brown car is 87 years old.
man
500
Name the simple predicate: The animals in the yard mooed and quacked.
mooed quacked
500
Simple or compound sentence: He jumped on the bed, and the bed fell through the ceiling.
Compound
500
He talked all through class she read quietly.
Run on
M
e
n
u