Supplying a noun is one way to fix the problem.
Supplying a noun is one way to fix the problem.
No, "not talking or yelling" is not a complete sentence. It is a phrase or fragment that lacks a subject and verb.
"...increased by four percent" is a fragment because it lacks a subject. WHAT increased by four percent?
Combine it with another sentence.
A sentence fragment is a group of words that is punctuated like a sentence but is incomplete because it lacks a subject, a verb, or both. It does not express a complete thought and does not form a complete sentence.
It lacks a complete verb.
Yes, if it doesn't have a predicate, it doesn't qualify as a sentence, only a fragment.
It lacks a subject. Correction: The coffee shop down the street has the friendliest service.
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.
A sentence fragment lacks a key part in a sentence:"Went jogging."A sentence has subject and predicate."Steve went jogging."Or another example is:"ran"instead you should use "she/he ran.For a proper sentence you need what, who, where, also it would be better if you also put in when or why or put then in together.
No. it lacks a subject.
Platelets, A fragment of a cell, lacks a nucleus