A simple sentence is a fundamental building block of language. It consists of a single independent clause, meaning it contains a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought. This makes it grammatically complete on its own.
The core components of a simple sentence are:
For example, in the sentence “The dog barked,” ‘The dog’ is the subject, and ‘barked’ is the predicate.
While a simple sentence has only one clause, that clause can be expanded with modifiers. These modifiers add detail without turning the sentence into a compound or complex one.
Consider:
Even with these additions, it remains a simple sentence because it contains only one independent clause.
Simple sentences are vital for:
A common misconception is that simple sentences are always short or unsophisticated. This is not true. A simple sentence can be quite long if it contains many modifiers, but it still only has one subject-verb unit.
Another point of confusion is distinguishing a simple sentence from a fragment (which lacks a subject or verb) or a compound sentence (which joins two independent clauses).
A simple sentence has one independent clause. A compound sentence has two or more independent clauses joined by a conjunction (like ‘and’, ‘but’, ‘or’).
Yes, a simple sentence can have a compound predicate, meaning it has multiple verbs linked by a conjunction, as long as they share the same subject. Example: “She sang and danced.”
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