The sentence "Those flowers bloom twice in the fall and spring" is not a fragment.
Those hibiscus flowers attract hummingbirds.
Those plants and insects and flowers were really effective
A sentence fragment is a an incomplete sentence standing on its own as a complete utterance. They are very common in speech: "Where did you go yesterday?" "To the movies." "Which one?" "Up." "Good?" "Yeah, really." All but the first of those is a sentence fragment. A dependent clause is a part of a larger sentence; it cannot stand on its own because then it would be a fragment. But since it is part of a larger, complete sentence, it is not. Note that fragments are often less than clauses - they can be single words, or prepositional phrases.
The deciduous forest is one that has trees which shed their leaves in autumn. In the spring those tress come to life with new growth of leaves and branches and sometimes flowers.
Probably pollen, leaves and flowers and maybe acorn
Not all flowers bloom in the spring those that do so largely because they need to set seed and fruit to the side
those twins are so motley Yin and Yang are motley figures Spring weather is very motley
First of all, "data that proves the results of the experiment" is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment. It is part of a statement, not a complete statement. Secondly, it consists of 8 words. Your question "what is the word" does not make sense. Every one of those 8 words is a word. They all qualify equally.
A sentence is a complete clause with a subject and a finite verb. A sentence fragment is not a complete clause, but is part of a clause (often lacking the verb to make a full sentence). For instance, a sentence fragment could be: The house that I used to live in. Swimming in the river. I cannot find. (missing the object, the 'what') When he came home. The business around the corner. The cigarette in my hand. As he kissed. How did? Many questions. When she saw the spider. NOTE: NONE of those should have periods because they are NOT complete sentences. MOST need a comma, and the rest of the sentence. A couple only need the rest of the 'complete thought', such as: The cigarette in my hand was burning. How did she know where I lived? Many questions are difficult to answer.
While you may never again need to physically label the subject, verb or predicate of a sentence, the exercise helps you learn how to construct a sentence while using proper grammar. By learning how to identify a subject and a verb, you also learn how to identify when those items are missing from a sentence, which would result in a sentence fragment that is not commonly acceptable grammar.
Those Little Flowers - 1913 was released on: USA: 31 July 1913
That child is the very likeness of his father. You have painted a good likeness of those flowers. I found a likeness of my great grandmother in an old photo album.