Types of Sentences:
A sentence that tells something is a declarative sentence. It ends with a period. A sentence that asks something is an interrogative sentence. It ends with a question mark. A sentence that expresses a strong feeling is an exclamatory sentence. It ends with an exclamation point. A sentence that gives an order is an imperative sentence. It ends with a period.
Compound Sentence:
A compound sentence is a sentence made up of two shorter sentences joined by a comma and the conjunction and, but, and or. Each part of the compound sentence has its own complete subject and predicate.
Common & Proper Nouns
A noun is a word that names a person, a place, or a thing. A common noun names any person, place, or thing. A proper noun names a particular person, place, or thing.
Verbs
An action verb shows what the subject does or did. A main verb tells what the subject is thinking or doing. A helping verb comes before the main verb and adds detail. Verb tense can help convey times, sequences, conditions, or states.
Direct and Indirect Objects
A direct object is the word that receives the action of the verb. A compound direct object are words that receive the action of the same verb. An indirect object tells to or for whom or what the action is done.
Conjunctions
Conjunctions are words that connect other words or groups of words in a sentence. The words and, but, and or are coordinating conjunctions. And joins together. But shows contrast. Or shows choice. Subordinating Conjunctions are words that connect one sentence part to another. The subordinating conjunction makes one sentence part dependent on another. When you have a sentence that has a subordinating conjunction the sentence is complex. Some subordinating conjunctions are if, because, although, after, when, and where.
Complex Sentences