πŸ“– Concept Reading

Sentence Structure

Everything a primary student needs to know about how sentences are built β€” with clear definitions, examples, fun facts, and more!

πŸŽ“ Primary Level πŸ“Œ English Grammar ⏱ Self-Paced

πŸ“‹ Topics on This Page

1
What is a Sentence?
2
Subject & Predicate
3
Parts of the Predicate
4
The Verb
5
Intransitive Verbs
6
Transitive Verbs
7
Linking Verbs
8
Objects
9
Direct & Indirect Object
10
Complements
11
Adjective Phrase
12
Adverbial Phrase
13
Prepositional Phrase
14
Appositive Phrase
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1. What is a Sentence?

Definition: A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. Every sentence must have a subject (who/what) and a predicate (what the subject does or is).
βœ… Complete Sentence
The dog runs fast.
βœ” This is a complete sentence. It tells us who (the dog) and what it does (runs fast).
❌ Incomplete Sentence (Fragment)
Running in the park.
✘ Who is running? We don't know. This is NOT a complete sentence.
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Fun Fact
The shortest grammatically correct sentence in English is "Go!" β€” the subject "you" is hidden but understood.
⚠ Common Student Errors
Writing a phrase as a sentence: "Because he was tired." (incomplete thought)
Forgetting a full stop at the end of a sentence.
Starting a sentence with a lowercase letter.
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2. Subject and Predicate

Subject

Definition: The subject is the part of the sentence that tells us who or what the sentence is about. It is usually a noun or pronoun.

Predicate

Definition: The predicate is the part that tells us what the subject does, is, or has. It always contains a verb.
Subject (Who/What)Predicate (What about it?)
Saraloves reading books.
The birdssing sweetly every morning.
My little brotheris very clever.
The old carbroke down on the road.
Theyplayed football after school.

Simple Subject vs Complete Subject

Example
The tall girl with red shoes won the race.
Complete Subject: The tall girl with red shoes
Simple Subject (key noun): girl

Simple Predicate vs Complete Predicate

Example
The baby slept quietly in her crib all night.
Complete Predicate: slept quietly in her crib all night
Simple Predicate (main verb): slept
πŸ’‘
Think About It
Ask "Who or what is the sentence about?" β†’ that's the subject. Ask "What does the subject do or what is said about it?" β†’ that's the predicate!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Confusing a long describing phrase as the subject: the simple subject is always the main noun.
Thinking only one word can be a subject β€” groups of words can be a subject too.
Missing the verb in the predicate (e.g., writing "The cat on the mat." β€” no verb!).
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3. Parts of the Predicate

Definition: The predicate can contain several parts: the verb, an object, a complement, and various phrases (like time, place, manner).
Full Predicate Breakdown
Maria gave her friend a gift at the party.
Verb: gave  |  Indirect Object: her friend  |  Direct Object: a gift  |  Adverbial Phrase: at the party
Predicate PartQuestion It AnswersExample
VerbWhat does the subject do/be?ran
Direct ObjectWhat / Whom?the ball
Indirect ObjectTo whom / For whom?her sister
Subject ComplementWhat/Who is the subject?happy
Adverbial PhraseWhere / When / How / Why?in the garden
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Fun Fact
A predicate with only a verb (like "She laughed.") is perfectly correct. Not all predicates need an object!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Thinking the predicate must always be long β€” "ran" alone can be a complete predicate.
Placing the object before the verb: wrong order causes confusion.
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4. The Verb

Definition: A verb is a word that shows an action, a state, or an occurrence. Every sentence must have at least one verb. It is the engine of the sentence!
TypeWhat it showsExamples
Action VerbPhysical or mental actionrun, eat, think, jump, write
Linking VerbConnects subject to descriptionis, are, was, were, seem, become
Helping VerbHelps the main verbhave, has, will, can, must, should
Action Verb
Ali kicked the ball hard.
"kicked" is the action verb β€” it tells what Ali did.
Helping Verb
She has been studying for two hours.
"has been" are helping verbs; "studying" is the main verb.
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Fun Fact
The word "set" has the most meanings of any English verb β€” over 430 definitions in the Oxford English Dictionary!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Forgetting that "is", "are", "was" are also verbs (linking verbs, not action verbs).
Treating a gerund (verb+ing as a noun) as the main verb: "Swimming is fun." β€” "swimming" is the subject here, not the main verb.
Subject-verb agreement errors: "The children runs" should be "The children run".
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5. Intransitive Verbs

Definition: An intransitive verb is an action verb that does not need an object to complete its meaning. The action stays with the subject.

Key Test: Ask "What?" or "Whom?" after the verb β€” if there is no answer, the verb is intransitive.

Examples
The baby cried.
Cried what? β€” No answer. βœ” Intransitive.
More Examples
The birds flew high in the sky.
Flew what? β€” No object. βœ” Intransitive. ("High in the sky" is an adverbial phrase, not an object.)
SentenceVerbObject?Type
He laughed loudly.laughedNoneIntransitive
The sun shines.shinesNoneIntransitive
She arrived early.arrivedNoneIntransitive
The dog barked.barkedNoneIntransitive
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Think About It
Some verbs can be both transitive and intransitive depending on how they're used:
"She reads every day." (intransitive) vs. "She reads a book." (transitive)
⚠ Common Student Errors
Confusing an adverb or adverbial phrase as an object: "She ran quickly" β€” "quickly" is NOT an object.
Thinking all verbs need an object β€” intransitive verbs are complete without one.
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6. Transitive Verbs

Definition: A transitive verb is an action verb that transfers action to an object. The action moves from the subject β†’ verb β†’ object. Without an object, the sentence feels incomplete.

Key Test: Ask "What?" or "Whom?" after the verb β€” if you get an answer, the verb is transitive.

Examples
Tom ate a mango.
Ate what? β†’ a mango. βœ” Transitive. "a mango" is the direct object.
More Examples
She wrote a letter to her friend.
Wrote what? β†’ a letter. βœ” Transitive. "to her friend" is an adverbial phrase.
SentenceVerbObjectType
He broke the window.brokethe windowTransitive
She bought new shoes.boughtnew shoesTransitive
They painted the wall.paintedthe wallTransitive
I love chocolate.lovechocolateTransitive
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Fun Fact
The word "transitive" comes from Latin transire meaning "to go across" β€” the action goes across from the doer to the receiver!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Using a transitive verb without an object: "She bought." β€” bought what? The sentence is incomplete.
Adding an unnecessary object to an intransitive verb: "She arrived the station." β€” incorrect; "arrived" is intransitive.
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7. Linking Verbs

Definition: A linking verb connects the subject to a word that describes or renames it. It does not show action β€” it shows a state of being. The most common linking verbs are forms of to be: is, am, are, was, were.

Other linking verbs: seem, appear, feel, look, taste, smell, sound, become, remain, grow, turn

Examples
She is a doctor.
"is" links "she" to "a doctor." β€” "a doctor" renames the subject.
More Examples
The soup smells delicious.
"smells" links "the soup" to "delicious." β€” "delicious" describes the subject.
SentenceLinking VerbWhat It Links To
The cake tastes sweet.tastessweet (adjective β€” describes subject)
He became a teacher.becamea teacher (noun β€” renames subject)
They seem happy today.seemhappy (adjective β€” describes subject)
The weather feels cold.feelscold (adjective β€” describes subject)

Linking vs Action β€” Same Verb, Different Role!

Linking
The rose smells sweet.
Can replace "smells" with "is" β†’ "The rose is sweet." βœ” Linking verb.
Action
The dog smells the flower.
Cannot replace with "is." The dog is doing something to the flower. βœ” Action (transitive) verb.
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Quick Test
Replace the verb with a form of "to be" (is/was). If the sentence still makes sense, it's a linking verb!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Using an adjective after an action verb instead of an adverb: "She looks beautiful" βœ” (linking) vs. "She runs beautiful" βœ— (should be "beautifully").
Thinking "feel", "smell", "look" are always linking verbs β€” context decides!
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8. Objects

Definition: An object is a word (or group of words) in the predicate that receives the action of a transitive verb or is affected by it. There are two types: direct object and indirect object.
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9. Direct and Indirect Objects

Direct Object

Definition: The direct object is the noun or pronoun that directly receives the action of the verb.
Find it by asking: Verb + "What?" or "Whom?"
Examples of Direct Object
She kicked the ball.
Kicked what? β†’ the ball. βœ” "the ball" is the direct object.
Example 2
He called his mother.
Called whom? β†’ his mother. βœ” "his mother" is the direct object.

Indirect Object

Definition: The indirect object is the noun or pronoun that tells us to whom or for whom the action of the verb is done. It comes before the direct object.
Find it by asking: Verb + Direct Object + "To whom?" or "For whom?"
Example with Both Objects
Father bought me a bicycle.
Bought what? β†’ a bicycle (Direct Object)
Bought for whom? β†’ me (Indirect Object)
Example 2
The teacher gave the students a test.
Gave what? β†’ a test (Direct Object)
Gave to whom? β†’ the students (Indirect Object)
SentenceIndirect ObjectDirect Object
She sent him a message.hima message
We told the class a story.the classa story
He showed his sister the photo.his sisterthe photo
Mom made us dinner.usdinner
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Fun Fact
You can rewrite a sentence with an indirect object using "to" or "for":
"She gave him a book." = "She gave a book to him."
⚠ Common Student Errors
Mixing up direct and indirect objects β€” remember: IO comes before DO.
Thinking every sentence with a transitive verb has an indirect object β€” not always true.
Identifying a prepositional phrase as an indirect object: "She gave a book to him" β€” here "him" is in a prepositional phrase, not an indirect object.
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10. Subject Complement & Object Complement

Subject Complement

Definition: A subject complement follows a linking verb and describes or renames the subject. It is either a predicate adjective (adjective) or a predicate nominative (noun/pronoun).
Predicate Adjective (describes the subject)
The sky is blue.
"blue" is an adjective describing the subject "sky." βœ” Subject complement (predicate adjective).
Predicate Nominative (renames the subject)
He became the class captain.
"the class captain" is a noun phrase that renames "he." βœ” Subject complement (predicate nominative).

Object Complement

Definition: An object complement follows the direct object and describes or renames the direct object. It is also either an adjective or a noun.
Object Complement β€” Adjective
They painted the door red.
"red" describes the direct object "the door." βœ” Object complement.
Object Complement β€” Noun
We elected Sara president.
"president" renames the direct object "Sara." βœ” Object complement.
TypeFollowsExample
Subject ComplementLinking verbShe is kind.
Object ComplementDirect objectThey called him a genius.
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Memory Tip
Subject Complement = after linking verb β†’ describes/renames the subject.
Object Complement = after direct object β†’ describes/renames the object.
⚠ Common Student Errors
Confusing a predicate adjective with an adverb: "She is beautiful" (adjective, subject complement) β‰  "She sings beautifully" (adverb).
Confusing object complement with indirect object β€” they serve very different roles.
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11. Adjective Phrase

Definition: An adjective phrase is a group of words that acts like an adjective β€” it describes a noun or pronoun. It usually follows the noun it describes.
Examples
The girl with long hair is my sister.
"with long hair" describes the noun "girl." βœ” Adjective phrase.
Example 2
The book on the top shelf belongs to me.
"on the top shelf" describes the noun "book." βœ” Adjective phrase.
SentenceAdjective PhraseNoun It Describes
The boy in the red shirt won.in the red shirtboy
The house near the lake is old.near the lakehouse
A man of great courage stood up.of great courageman
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Fun Fact
Adjective phrases usually begin with a preposition (in, on, of, with, near...) and work just like a single adjective!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Placing an adjective phrase too far from the noun it describes, causing confusion: "The dog barked at the man with sharp teeth." β€” whose sharp teeth? Place phrases close to the noun they modify.
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12. Adverbial Phrase

Definition: An adverbial phrase is a group of words that acts like an adverb β€” it tells us when, where, how, why, or how much something happens. It modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
AnswersExample PhraseExample Sentence
Where?in the parkThey played in the park.
When?after schoolShe arrived after school.
How?with great careHe lifted the box with great care.
Why?because of the rainThey stayed home because of the rain.
How long?for two hoursShe slept for two hours.
Full Example
The children played in the garden until sunset.
"in the garden" β†’ adverbial phrase (where)
"until sunset" β†’ adverbial phrase (when)
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Memory Tip
Adverbial phrases answer the same questions as adverbs: When? Where? How? Why? How often? How long?
⚠ Common Student Errors
Confusing adverbial phrases with adjective phrases β€” ask: does it describe a noun? (adjective phrase) or modify a verb/adjective? (adverbial phrase).
Using double adverbials that contradict: "She walked quickly with slow steps." β€” be consistent.
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13. Prepositional Phrase

Definition: A prepositional phrase begins with a preposition (in, on, at, by, with, of, under, beside, between...) and ends with a noun or pronoun (called the object of the preposition). It can act as either an adjective phrase or an adverbial phrase.
Examples
The cat sat under the table.
"under" = preposition; "the table" = object. Modifies the verb "sat" (where). βœ” Adverbial prepositional phrase.
Example 2
The key on the desk is mine.
"on the desk" modifies the noun "key" (which key?). βœ” Adjective prepositional phrase.
Common Prepositions
in, on, at, by, with, of, for, to, from, under, over, beside, between, through, about, behind, during, after, before, near, across
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Fun Fact
A preposition always has a team β€” it never works alone. Preposition + noun/pronoun = prepositional phrase!
⚠ Common Student Errors
Ending a formal sentence with a preposition: "Where is she from?" is acceptable in everyday speech but in formal writing, restructure carefully.
Using wrong preposition: "He is good in maths" β€” should be "good at maths."
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14. Appositive Phrase

Definition: An appositive phrase is a noun or noun phrase placed next to another noun to identify or give more information about it. It is usually set off by commas.
Examples
Mr. Ahmed, our English teacher, won an award.
"our English teacher" identifies/explains "Mr. Ahmed." βœ” Appositive phrase.
Example 2
My dog, a golden retriever, loves to swim.
"a golden retriever" renames "my dog." βœ” Appositive phrase.
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Memory Tip
Try removing the appositive phrase β€” if the sentence still makes sense, it's a non-essential appositive (use commas). If the sentence loses its meaning, it's essential (no commas).
⚠ Common Student Errors
Forgetting commas around non-essential appositives: "My sister Sara likes cats." (Sara = essential) vs. "My sister, Sara, likes cats." (Sara = non-essential, only one sister).
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Quick Reference: Sentence Structure Summary

TermWhat It IsQuestion It AnswersExample
SubjectWho/what the sentence is aboutWho? What?Birds sing.
PredicateWhat the subject does/isWhat does/is?Birds sing loudly.
Transitive VerbAction that needs an objectβ€”She ate rice.
Intransitive VerbAction needing no objectβ€”He laughed.
Linking VerbConnects subject to descriptionβ€”She is tall.
Direct ObjectReceives the verb's actionWhat? Whom?He kicked the ball.
Indirect ObjectBenefits from the actionTo/for whom?She gave him a pen.
Subject ComplementDescribes/renames subject (after linking verb)β€”He is smart.
Object ComplementDescribes/renames direct objectβ€”They called him captain.
Adjective PhraseDescribes a nounWhich? What kind?The girl with curly hair.
Adverbial PhraseModifies a verb/adj/adverbWhen? Where? How?He ran in the rain.
Prepositional PhraseBegins with a prepositionVariesShe sat on the chair.
Appositive PhraseRenames a nearby nounβ€”Ali, my best friend, came.

🎯 Test Your Knowledge!

You've learned all about sentence structure! Now try the quiz and see how much you remember. Good luck, superstar! ⭐

πŸ“ Start the Quiz Now
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