Contributor: Allison Crews. Lesson ID: 13599
Sentences are the building blocks of language arts, so you want to ensure you have the right blueprint! This lesson will teach the parts and types of essential sentence structure.
Hey!
This is a lesson about sentence types.
Learn the differences!
As long as there is a minimum of a subject, verb, and complete idea, it's a sentence. But it gets increasingly complex from there (and compound, too)!
A subject tells who or what is the primary actor of the sentence. This is who or what the sentence is about.
A verb tells what the subject is doing or being.
The most basic, simple sentences can be made of two words.
He ran.
It is.
Rex, sit!
As long as there is a simple subject, a verb, and it expresses a complete thought, it's a sentence.
There are four basic types of sentences. They are defined by purpose and differentiated by punctuation.
Declarative
Example: I want pizza for dinner.
Exclamatory
Example: Oh my goodness!
Imperative
Example: Do these dishes!
Interrogative
Example: Could you pick me up at 6:30?
To recap:
Click through to the Got It? section to continue applying what you've learned about sentences.