Fragmented clauses
A sentence must have at least one independent clause. A sentence may also contain one or more subordinate clauses.
Subordinate clauses must be attached to an independent clause; they cannot stand alone. If you punctuate a subordinate clause as a complete sentence, you create a fragment.
Here are some examples of fragmented clauses:
Note that each of these subordinate clauses is patterned like a sentence, with both a subject and a verb. However, each begins with a word or words that mark the clause as subordinate (If, Unless, Even though, Which).
Fragmented clauses can be fixed in one of two ways:
- Attach a fragmented clause to an independent clause.
If and even though introduce subordinate clauses. The subordinate clauses can be joined to independent clauses to to form complete sentences.
- Delete the word or words that mark the clause as subordinate, and turn the clause into a complete sentence.
Deleting the words that mark the clauses as subordinate produces complete, independent clauses that can stand as sentences.
Exercises: