"Be punctual" is a complete sentence, because the verb is in the imperative mood, in which the subject "You" is always implied by the verb itself.
An incomplete sentence is also called a fragment. It is a group of words that does not form a complete thought or express a complete idea.
An incomplete sentence missing a subject is called a sentence fragment. Sentence fragments can occur when there is a group of words that is not a complete sentence because it is missing a subject, verb, or complete thought.
For a sentence to be complete, it must have a subject and a verb. Giving the incomplete sentence the missing parts will make it complete.For example:"Went to the park" can be made complete by adding a subject to make it "We went to the park""It blue" can be made complete by adding a verb to make it "It is blue""The moon tonight" can be made complete by adding a subject and a verb to make it "I looked at the moon tonight"
Sentence fragment - an incomplete sentence that is punctuated as though it were complete.A sentence is a group of words that express a complete thought.It has two basic parts:* a subject (names who or what the sentence is about) * and a predicate (says something about the subject)
incomplete, undone, unfinished, unperfected
Yes, a semicolon could indeed join an incomplete sentence and a complete sentence.
It is a complete sentence.
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.
An incomplete sentence is also called a fragment. It is a group of words that does not form a complete thought or express a complete idea.
An incomplete sentence missing a subject is called a sentence fragment. Sentence fragments can occur when there is a group of words that is not a complete sentence because it is missing a subject, verb, or complete thought.
An incomplete grammatical construction is a series of words, phrases, or clauses that do not constitute a complete sentence. A complete sentence has a subject and a verb, and does not contain an introductory adverb, pronoun, or other word that makes it depend on a complete sentence to make sense. Some examples: Complete sentence: John hit me. Incomplete sentence: when John hit me...[This depends on a complete sentence to make sense.] Complete sentence: When John hit me, I hit him back. Complete sentence: Who is good? [The fact that it's a question makes it complete.] Incomplete sentence: who is good [The fact that it's not a question makes it depend on a complete sentence to make sense.] Complete sentence: A boy who is good will not go to the principle's office every so often. Other incomplete sentences: at at the bank feeling confused at the bank who is feeling confused at the bank because I was feeling confused at the bank Complete sentence: I left because I was feeling confused at the bank.
For a sentence to be complete, it must have a subject and a verb. Giving the incomplete sentence the missing parts will make it complete.For example:"Went to the park" can be made complete by adding a subject to make it "We went to the park""It blue" can be made complete by adding a verb to make it "It is blue""The moon tonight" can be made complete by adding a subject and a verb to make it "I looked at the moon tonight"
Bob is my most punctual student.I am a punctual person; I am always on time.
Incomplete, you wouldn't want to start a sentence with a preposition.
A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence. A complete sentence requires at least a subject and verb. A sentence fragment is missing one of these.
He made it a point to always be punctual. You must be punctual to an interview or you are starting off on a bad foot.
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.