Chapter 3

Having It All: Writing Complete Sentences

IN THIS CHAPTER

check Making sure your sentence has a subject/verb pair

check Avoiding fragments and run-ons

check Joining sentences legally for better flow

check Placing endmarks that set the tone

check Recognizing proper sentences

Did you hear the story about the child who said nothing for the first five years of life and then began to speak in perfect, complete sentences? Supposedly the kid grew up to be something important, like a Supreme Court justice or a CEO. I question the story’s accuracy, but I don’t doubt that Supreme Court justices, CEOs, or anyone else with a good job knows how to write a complete sentence.

You need to know how to do so, too, and in this chapter I give you a complete (pardon the pun) guide to sentence completeness, including how to punctuate and how to combine thoughts using proper grammar. (For more on how to make your combinations stylish, check out Chapter 17.)

The evil geniuses who write standardized tests want to know whether ...

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