The phrase 'were greedy for more gold' is a fragment.
Who was greedy?
Correct:
The men were greedy for more gold.
The miners were greedy for more gold.
he was greedy! :)
"The story of a dog" is a fragment. There is no action or linking verb.It is more likely to be a title.
In general terms, a "fragment error" occurs in written compositions of various kinds. In all cases, a fragment happens when a sentence that has been written lacks either a subject or a predicate. Such a sentence is incomplete: it provides only a "fragment" of the information needed in order for a sentence to be complete or, in more precise grammatical terms, independent.
To make a fragment into a sentence, you need to add a subject and a predicate. A subject is the main noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, and the predicate is the verb or verb phrase that describes the subject. By adding these elements, the fragment becomes a complete sentence with a clear meaning.
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.
A run-on sentence contains too much information that should be in two or more sentences. For example: She went home and changed her clothes then went out to the porch her friend was there they liked each other that was until they had a fight. A sentence fragment is incomplete, like She thought she... (what?).
This is a sentence fragment . Please complete the question.
What? Is that a question... More of a sentence Fragment...
A sentence fragment can be paired with one or more fragments containing the missing information (subject, predicate, or object), or it can have the missing structural part added, or it can be combined with another complete sentence.
Periods are not allowed. Please make sure your question is a single sentenceYou may have some misspellings in your questionThis sentence is a fragment please add more to complete it
The smallest fragment will more furthest in the gel.
"Neither is Grandma" is a sentence because it includes a subject and a verb pertaining to the subject (the subject does it). "Neither is Grandma" can be rewritten as "Grandma is neither", which is more obviously a sentence, though we would not normally say it that way.