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LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

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Page 1: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

LANGUAGESentences

Subjects - Predicates

Punctuation

Page 2: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

SENTENCES

When you read this, you are reading a sentence. Now you are reading another sentence. What is a sentence?

Page 3: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

A sentence is a group of words that tells a

complete thought. A sentence is a group

of words that make sense.

Page 4: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Look at these groups

of words.

Are they sentences?

1. Jennifer walks to the beach.

2. She takes her dog with her.

3. in the water

Page 5: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Number 1 is a complete thought.

Jennifer walks to the beach.

Every sentence must start with a capital letter and ends with a

punctuation mark.

A sentence tells a complete thought.

Page 6: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Number 2 is also a sentence. It tells you a

complete thought.She takes her dog with her.

It also starts with a capital letter and ends

with a period.

Page 7: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Number 3 is not a sentence. It does not

tell you a complete thought. It leaves you

with questions.in the water

What is in the water?

Page 8: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Number 3 is a phrase. We can add words to make it a complete

sentence.

Change, “in the water,” to a complete

sentence.

Page 9: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

SUBJECTS

Every sentence must have a subject.

The subject is the who or what the sentence is about.

Page 10: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Jennifer walks her dog.

To find the subject ask: who or what.

Who walks the dog?

Jennifer walks the dog. Jennifer is the subject.

Page 11: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

PREDICATE

After you find the subject it is easy to find the predicate. The predicate is just about all of the other

words in the sentence.

Page 12: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Jennifer walks her dog.Jennifer is the subject.

“walks her dog,”is the predicate.

The predicate is the verb and the words

after the verb.

Page 13: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Can you find the subject and the predicate in the

sentence below?Remember: the subject

tells you who or what.The predicate is the verb

and the words after the verb.

Page 14: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

STOP Lauren swims in the

water.• Circle the subject.

• Underline the predicate.

Page 15: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

STOPEmmaly rode her blue

bike in the street. Circle the subject.

Underline the predicate.

Page 16: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Sometimes a subject has more than one

word.

See if you can find the subject in the next

sentence.

Page 17: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Our new teacher has long brown hair.

Remember to ask: who or what?

Who has long brown hair?

Page 18: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

If you guessed, our new teacher,

you are right!

Sometimes extra words are used to describe

the subject.

Page 19: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

STOP – Find the subject.

My little grandbaby

Madison has blue eyes.

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Can you find the subject and the predicate of the

next sentence?Subject: who or what

Predicate: verb and words after the verb

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STOP Circle the complete subject.

Underline the complete

predicate.

The alien spaceship

landed at our school.

Page 22: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Rules for Writing Sentences

Rule 1. Every sentence must begin with a capital letter.

Rule 2. Every sentence must end with a punctuation mark.

Use different marks for different kinds of sentences.

Page 23: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

. ? !You use a period to end

sentences that tell something.

Sentences that ask questions end with question marks.

Sentences that show excitement end with an exclamation mark!

Page 24: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Now it is your turn.

See if you can pick the correct punctuation for

the next sentences.

Page 25: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

We won __

What’s for lunch__

I got an A on the test__

My dog ate the plant__

Can you come over__

Page 26: LANGUAGE Sentences Subjects - Predicates Punctuation

Bonus: Find some complete sentences in books and magazines. Write down the sentences. Circle the complete subject and underline the complete predicate.