Leave it as is; it's a complete sentence.
I have a fragment of glass in my hand. As political agreement could not be achieved, society began to fragment.
"Shrapnel" means fragment of some military item, like a bullet, or a bomb shell, orsomething like that. You could use it like " As the bomb exploded, shrapnel flew everywhere" or "Asthe bullet made contact, it broke into shrapnel"
Could you please be more specific.
Vacant means Empty, therefore, a sentence you could use is: "The parking-lot is completely vacant."
Actually a good sentence is your mom could say"Go clean your room". You could say"whatever". The sentence would be. Go clean you room, whatever!
Leave it as is; it's a complete sentence.
A sentence missing a subject or a verb is a fragment.
Somebody will have to improve on this answer. One similarity between a sentence and a sentence fragment could be a sentence's length. If somebody says, "Who did that?" you could answer, "I did," and that is a sentence... but in a different scenario, that may be considered a sentence fragment. Why? Because if that sentence was all by itself, "I did," would be nonsense. What did "I" do? "I did jump," could then complete it.
It could be a complete sentence if it was the answer to a question such as "Who's that girl?"
I have a fragment of glass in my hand. As political agreement could not be achieved, society began to fragment.
I had a fragment of wood mixed in with the potting soil.The police analyzed the fragment of metal to see if they could use it to identify the killer.
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.
By definition a fragment is just "part" of a sentence. I suppose you could have the subject in that part, but it would be hard to refer to it as the subject without the rest of the sentence to define it's role.
Combine it with another sentence.
Yes, "Is you won the trophy" is a fragment sentence because it is missing a subject and does not express a complete thought. It could be corrected by adding the subject "You" at the beginning to make it a complete sentence, such as "You won the trophy."
It is a sentence. It is a declarative sentence also because it's giving a demand.
No, the sentence "all you could do was keep writing" is a complete sentence because it has a subject ("you") and a verb phrase ("could do was keep writing"). It expresses a complete thought on its own.