A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence. For example these have periods, but are not sentences:I wanted.
We were.
When I was there.
While he was in the store.
If you had.
I think it would usually be part of the complete predicate.
"Cloistered" in the given sentence is a verb, part of the past tense in the passive voice of the verb "cloister". The complete verb is "were cloistered".
Don't apologize for your age, lack of recent relevant experience, and do not convey desperation.
It is not a complete sentence by itself, but it is correct as part of a sentence such as: "We are looking forward to you support."
An idiom usually is a sentence, or part of one. It certainly can be used as part of a sentence. The way to tell if it's an idiom is if it makes sense the way it's literally written.
Semicolons separate only independent clauses, so the second clause will have to also be a complete sentence.
sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb. Fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.
The phrase "I was then too young" is a complete sentence comprised of a subject ("I") and a verb ("was"), therefore it is a declarative sentence. It does not represent a single part of speech as it contains multiple elements functioning together.
The complete subject of this sentence is "The cat." Everything from "purred" on is part of the predicate. The cat did what? Purred. How? With pleasure. At what? At the visitor's skill.
I think it would usually be part of the complete predicate.
complete subject
complete predicate
No, a preposition cannot be part of the complete subject. The complete subject is the noun or pronoun that a sentence is about, and it does not include prepositions. Prepositions are used to show the relationship between words in a sentence.
A sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb.A sentence fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.The above are sentences.Here are some fragments that make no sense:the sentence fragment?what is?your answer in a complete sentencethe boy who lived down the streetbecause he had to go home
No, a preposition is not a complete sentence. It is a part of speech that typically comes before a noun or pronoun to show its relationship to another word in the sentence. A complete sentence must have a subject and a verb.
When two complete sentences are in one complete paragraph; does that mean each sentence is a SEPARATE topic? Or is each separate sentence part of the SAME topic?
A preposition introduces a subordinate clause to the main clause of the sentence. For example, both 'to the main clause of the sentence' and 'of the sentence' are subordinate clauses. The words 'to' and 'of' are prepositions. Subordinate clauses written by themselves are not complete sentences. The main clause is still a complete sentence without the subordinate clause. A preposition introduces a subordinate clause. The main clause of the sentence. The sentence.