Yes, 'Listen to you.' is an imperative sentence, the subject is implied: 'You listen to you.'
Other common imperative sentences with an implied subject are, 'Look out!', 'Stop!', or 'Jump.' The implied subject of these sentences is 'you'.
Yes, 'Listen to me.' is an imperative sentence, the subject is implied: 'You listen to me.' Other common imperative sentences with an implied subject are, 'Look out!', 'Stop!', or 'Jump.' The implied subject of these sentences is 'you'.
A sentence fragment is part of a sentence that has either no subject or predicate. In most instances, it does not make sense if it stands alone. "Going to the races" is a sentence fragment. WHO is going? The only time this would not be a fragment is in response to a question in dialogue.
Leave it as is ? It's a complete sentence.
No, it is not a complete sentence. It is a fragment.
There may or may not be a full stop at the end of a sentence fragment. It is the grammatical content that determines whether it is a fragment. For example, 'She opened the' is a fragment, whether there is a full stop after it or not.
Yes, 'Listen to me.' is an imperative sentence, the subject is implied: 'You listen to me.' Other common imperative sentences with an implied subject are, 'Look out!', 'Stop!', or 'Jump.' The implied subject of these sentences is 'you'.
Do you work? is a complete sentence; it is not a sentence fragment.
"She wave." is fragment but "She waves" is a sentence.
fragment
Fragment.
sentence fragment
It is a sentence fragment
is a sentence fragment
Make each fragment into a complete sentence.
"After the storm," is not a complete sentence so it is a fragment.
A sentence is a fragment when you do not have a noun/pronoun and a verb.
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.