YES - it doesn't tell you what happens next - eg - I picked a beautiful flower.
Yes, "When you stopped by the garden" is a sentence fragment. It lacks a main clause to form a complete sentence.
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
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.
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.
No, it is not a complete sentence. It is a fragment.
Yes, that is correct. A fragment is an incomplete sentence that does not express a complete thought. So, even if you punctuate a fragment like a sentence, it remains a fragment because it lacks a subject, verb, or complete meaning.
There are 2 sentence fragments, which are: A When we stopped by the garden (what then?) Example: When we stopped by the garden, we found it was closed. D Stopping by the garden we saw (what, needs an object). Example: Stopping by the garden, we saw the vandalism done to the rose bushes. These two are correct as sentences. B Stop by the garden. (the subject You is assumed). C We stopped; she didn't. (Notice the semi-colon used to connect the two ideas.)
Yes.
No, it is a complete sentence, but it needs punctuation (comma, semicolon) or it becomes a run-on. "You stopped, she didn't." "You stopped; she didn't."
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.