sentence
A fragment sentence is a partial sentence. It does not have everything it needs to be a full sentence. For example: "The dog" is a fragment.
"The story of a dog" is a fragment. There is no action or linking verb.It is more likely to be a title.
A dog howled loudly all night is a sentence.
A sentence will have both a subject and a predicate (or one that is understood, for imperatives, e.g. "Stop!" = You must stop! / You should stop!) A sentence fragment will be missing either a subject or a predicate, or may be a dependent clause without an independent clause. Sentence: John has a dog that likes to play. Fragment: Has a dog that likes to play (no subject) Fragment: A dog that likes to play (no predicate for dog) Fragment: That likes to play (no independent clause) Sometimes fragments are acceptable in literary forms, e.g. where used for effect. "The killer had struck again! In broad daylight. And gotten away." (the phrase and clause are fragments that should have been part of the sentence)
A phrase or clause written as a sentence but lacking an element, as a subject or verb, that would enable it to function as an independent sentence in normative written English.
It is a sentence. It is a declarative sentence also because it's giving a demand.
Read your sentence out loud-- only what you wrote. Is it a complete sentence? Or, is the other half in the next sentence? Does the sentence have a subject and verb (actor and action)? Stop after each period-- if you have to ask "What then?" or "So what?" or "because what" after a period, you might have a sentence fragment.Example:Fragment: First sentence - He was going because. (because what?)Fragment: Second sentence: He bought tickets.Full sentence put together: He was going because he bought tickets.
It could be either. 'Sit!' as an imperative form of the verb to sit (an instruction given to a dog, for example) is a sentence in its own right. Sit can also be just one word in a sentence, for example 'I asked you not to sit there.' In that case it would be a fragment.
The seeing eye dog was an appendage the the blind man.
A sentence fragment has no object; either no subject or no verb. As has been pointed out on The Simpsons, "Sentence Fragment" is, itself, a sentence fragment. For example, "The fox, the dog." Doesn't have a verb - it doesn't stand up as a sentence. "The fox jumps the dog." Becomes a sentence with the addition of the verb. Another example, "Looking into the distance, saw the house." Is a sentence fragment as it has no subject, adding a subject makes the sentence: "Looking into the distance, he saw the house."
dog and cat
no, the dog can actually harm the bearded dragon.