Yes, "Sit" is a fragment because it lacks a subject and a complete verb. It does not express a complete thought on its own.
"Sit down and hear" is a sentence fragment, as it lacks a subject and a main verb. To make it a complete sentence, you could add a subject and a verb, such as "Please sit down and hear the presentation."
Yes, that is correct. A fragment is an incomplete sentence that does not express a complete thought. So, even if you punctuate a fragment like a sentence, it remains a fragment because it lacks a subject, verb, or complete meaning.
The first syllable "frag" in the word "fragment" is accented.
The Tagalog word for "fragment" is "pingas" or "piraso."
Quotation marks are used around spoken words to indicate dialogue in written text.
extract, part, piece, section, selection, passage, fragment, quotation
It could be either. 'Sit!' as an imperative form of the verb to sit (an instruction given to a dog, for example) is a sentence in its own right. Sit can also be just one word in a sentence, for example 'I asked you not to sit there.' In that case it would be a fragment.
It is a sentence. It is a declarative sentence also because it's giving a demand.
It means don't just sit there thinking about it, do it! Nike it, means-"Just Do It"
"Sit down and hear" is a sentence fragment, as it lacks a subject and a main verb. To make it a complete sentence, you could add a subject and a verb, such as "Please sit down and hear the presentation."
Fragment.
Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".Find a quotation you like, and call it "quotation of the day".
It is a fragment that shouldn't be capitalized or punctuated.
it means definitely found dead fragment, which mean you found dead fragment and do not use it.
It is a fragment that shouldn't be capitalized or punctuated.
Yes, it is a fragment.
fragment