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A sentence must express a complete thought. The length of the sentence is not important—it may be very long or very short, but it must make sense by itself.
Sometimes writers mistakenly believe that a long sentence is too long and divide it in two, creating an error called a sentence fragment.
In grammar, the term sentence fragment refers to an incomplete group of words punctuated as a sentence. Often, the fragment has been broken off from the sentence before or after it, and you can fix it simply by re-attaching it. At other times, you may need to add or remove words to turn a fragment into a complete sentence.
Most fragments are phrases, dependent clauses or mixed constructions.
A phrase or a series of phrases may contain several words. But the word group cannot express a complete thought because it lacks something essential to a sentence: a subject or a verb, or both. In the examples below, the fragments are in italics:
Unlike a phrase, a dependent clause contains a subject and a verb. But it does not express a complete thought. To make sense, it must be connected to an independent clause (a simple sentence):
A mixed construction is a "sentence" made up of mismatched parts. One very common example is a prepositional phrase followed by a verb. The writer is trying to use the object of the preposition as the subject of the verb. But the object can’t do double duty, so the word group ends up as a fragment, without a subject.
Sentence fragments can be hard to detect, since they usually sound all right when you read them together with the surrounding sentences.
Here’s a trick: starting from the end of the paragraph, read each "sentence" aloud on its own. Usually the fragments won’t sound complete, and you will be able to pick them out more easily.
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