No its is not
Sentence Fragment
"I quit" is a complete sentence because it has a subject "I" and a predicate "quit" which expresses a complete thought.
Yes, "The boy on the phone" is a sentence fragment because it does not express a complete thought or have a subject and a predicate.
No. It is a complete sentence with a subject (Jesus) and predicate (wept).
Yes, if it doesn't have a predicate, it doesn't qualify as a sentence, only a fragment.
Yes, "The man that I saw yesterday" is a sentence fragment. It lacks a complete thought or predicate.
The result is a sentence fragment. These fragments do not express a complete thought or idea and require additional information to form a complete sentence.
You can't really have a predicate fragment. Here is a predicate sentence: Judy (runs to the beach every day). (Runs to the beach every day) is the predicate fragment.
All you have to do is think of a predicate if the fragment has only a subject. For example, the fragment is: Liz got the The complete sentence is: Liz got the prom dress she had wanted for years and years, but it couldn't fit her.
No. It is a complete sentence. They (subject) wanted (predicate, with) their own post office(object).
It is a sentence. It has a subject - bus a predicate - got to the village. It also conveys a complete thought
This is known as a sentence fragment. It lacks either a subject, a predicate, or does not express a complete thought on its own. Sentence fragments can occur due to incomplete construction or lack of context.