Fragment or No?
Fix It!
Interjections 101
Creative Challenge
Grammar Grab Bag
100

“After we finished our homework.” Is this a fragment or a complete sentence?

Fragment — it’s a dependent clause missing a complete thought.

100

Fix this fragment: “Since we missed the bus.”

“Since we missed the bus, we walked to school.”

100

What is an interjection?

A word or short phrase that expresses sudden emotion or reaction.

100

Write a short sentence that begins with an interjection.

Example: “Hey! Don’t forget your lunch.”

100

True or False: Every group of words with a verb is a complete sentence.

False — it must also have a subject and express a complete thought.

200

“The dog chased the mail carrier down the street.” Fragment or complete?

Complete sentence.

200

Fix this: “When the movie ended.”

“When the movie ended, everyone clapped.”

200

Identify the interjection: “Wow! That magician was amazing!”

“Wow!”

200

Create a two-word fragment that could be used in a story.

Example: “So close.”

200

Which part of speech are Wow, Oops, and Hey?

Interjections.

300

Identify the fragment: A) She went to the store. B) While she was waiting in line.

B — “While she was waiting in line.”

300

Fix this: “Running through the rain.”

“Running through the rain, she laughed with joy.”

300

Add a correct interjection to this sentence: “_____! I forgot my homework.”

“Oh no!” or “Yikes!”

300

Turn this fragment into a vivid sentence: “Running in fear.”

“Running in fear, the campers dashed into the forest.”

300

What punctuation can follow a mild interjection?

A comma (,).

400

Explain why “Because it was raining” is a fragment.

It begins with a subordinating conjunction and doesn’t express a complete thought.

400

Turn this into two complete sentences: “While I was cooking the pasta boiled over.”

“While I was cooking, the pasta boiled over.”

400

What punctuation usually follows a strong interjection?

An exclamation mark (!)

400

Use an interjection in dialogue.

Example: “Ouch! That was my toe!”

400

Which of these could be used as a fragment for effect in writing? A) “So unfair!” B) “Because it’s unfair.”

A — “So unfair!” is acceptable as stylistic emphasis.

500

Write your own sentence fragment that begins with although and explain why it’s incomplete.

Example: “Although the sun was shining.” → Needs a main clause.

500

Combine these fragments into one complete sentence: “After the storm. The rainbow appeared.”

“After the storm, the rainbow appeared.”

500

Write your own sentence with an interjection showing surprise, and label both the interjection and the subject.

Example: “Whoa! The volcano actually erupted!” — Interjection: Whoa! Subject: volcano

500

Write a short, dramatic paragraph (2–3 sentences) using one fragment for effect and one interjection.

Example: “Crash! The window shattered. Just silence after that.”

500

Explain the difference between a fragment and a run-on sentence.

A fragment is missing a subject or complete thought; a run-on has too many thoughts without proper punctuation.