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Eddie88 Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Adding phrases to a complete sentence

Hi,

1)
Firsty, I know independent clause, dependent clause and that a phrase is when it is a group of words without a subject-verb relationship; however, are there more types than these three?

With this in mind, if one has wrtitten a complete setence, is it correect/allowed to have phrases added to it every time?

That is, is it correct to have a phrase added to an independent clause every time as long as a comma separates the two? And does the comma have to be present?

2)
And secondly, when one breaks up a sentence and identifies (if it is a complex sentence) the two clauses and (a) phrase(s), do commas usually need to be used to separate dependent clauses and independent clauses from phrases?

For example, I was walking home bringing the food back to my friends.

I was walking home=indep clause
bringing the food back to my friends=phrase, as no subject

Here is an example where I know I need a comma to separate the two parts of the sentence, but why is it it different from the above sentence?

It was a really nice day, wanted to go surfing.

So, when does one know when a comma is needed to separate the phrase from the independent/dependent clause?

3)
Also, is there a difference between a conjunction and a coordinating conjunction?

4)
Finally, is whereas a conjunctive adverb or is it just a conjunction? I need to know how it should be punctuated when joining clauses.

Thanks a lot!!
  

Top answer

Eddie88 Hi, 1) Firsty, I know independent clause, dependent clause and that a phrase is when it is a group of words without a subject-verb relationship; however, are there more types than these three? >> Interjections (maybe, they are sort of stand-alone set phrases). Oh my!

  • Eddie88 Hi, 1) Firsty, I know independent clause, dependent clause and that a phrase is when it is a group of words without a subject-verb relationship; however, are there more types than these three?
  • >> Interjections (maybe, they are sort of stand-alone set phrases).
  • Oh my!
  • Oh dear!
  • Heavens to mercy!
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4 Answers
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Eddie88Hi,

1)
Firsty, I know independent clause, dependent clause and that a phrase is when it is a group of words without a subject-verb relationship; however, are there more types than these three? >> Interjections (maybe, they are sort of stand-alone set phrases). Oh my! Oh dear! Heavens to mercy!

With this in mind, if one has wrtitte
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Thanks. I know the comma rules etc, but I am just a little confused about what can be added to a complete sentence.

This is a perfect example to explain my perplexity.

'I was walking home bringing the food back to my friends'

I was walking home is an independent clause

bringing the food back to my friends=is a phrase as there is a ver but no subject. Correct?
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Thanks. I know the comma rules etc, but I am just a little confused about what can be added to a complete sentence.

This is a perfect example to explain my perplexity.

'I was walking home bringing the food back to my friends'

I was walking home is an independent clause

bringing the food back to my friends=is a phrase as there is a ver but no subject. Correct?
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1) 'I was walking home and bringing the food back to my friends' - now this is one clause with a complex verb. (was walking and was bringing) - a comma here is not correct.
2) 'I was walking home bringing the food back to my friends'
If you do not put a comma in after home, the sentence reads like sentence 1. (The structure is different, though)

But you can put it in

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