Online Writing Lab - (OWL)
Return to Dixie OWL
Return to Punctuation and Usage menu
Sentence Fragments
Fragments are incomplete sentences. Usually, fragments are
pieces of sentences that have become disconnected from the main clause. One of the easiest
ways to correct them is to remove the period between the fragment and the main clause.
Other kinds of punctuation may be needed for the newly combined sentence. Below are some
examples with the fragments shown in italics. Notice that the fragment is
frequently a dependent clause or long phrase that follows the main clause.
| Fragment (phrase or dependent clause) |
Possible Revision |
| Purdue offers many majors in engineering. Such as
electrical, chemical, and industrial engineering. |
Purdue offers many majors in engineering,
such as electrical, chemical, and industrial engineering. |
| Coach Deetz exemplified this behavior by walking off the
field in the middle of a game. Leaving her team at a time when we needed her. |
Coach Deetz exemplified this behavior by
walking off the field in the middle of a game, leaving her team at a time when we needed
her. |
| I need to find a new roommate. Because the one I have
now isn't working out too well. |
I need to find a new roommate because the
one I have now isn't working out too well. |
| The current city policy on housing is incomplete as it
stands. Which is why we believe the proposed
amendments should be passed. |
Because the current city policy on housing
is incomplete as it stands, we believe the proposed
amendments should be passed. |
You may have noticed that newspaper and magazine journalists
often use a dependent clause as a separate sentence when it follows clearly from the
preceding main clause, as in the last example above. This is a conventional journalistic
practice, often used for emphasis. For academic writing and other more formal writing
situations, however, you should avoid such journalistic fragment sentences.
Some fragments are not clearly pieces of sentences that have
been left unattached to the main clause; they are written as main clauses but lack a
subject or main verb.
| Fragment (incomplete main clause) |
Possible Revisions |
- No main verb
- A story with deep thoughts and emotions.
|
Appositive: Gilman's "The
Yellow Wallpaper," a story with deep thoughts and emotions, has impressed critics for
decades.
Direct object: She told a story with deep thoughts and
emotions. |
Toys of all kinds thrown everywhere.
|
Complete verb: Toys of all
kinds were thrown everywhere.
Direct object: They found toys of all kinds thrown
everywhere. |
A record of accomplishment beginning when you were first
hired.
|
Direct object: I've noticed a
record of accomplishment beginning when you were first hired.
Main verb: A record of accomplishment began when you were
first hired. |
- No subject
- With the ultimate effect of all advertising is to sell the
product.
|
Remove preposition: The
ultimate effect of all advertising is to sell the product. |
By paying too much attention to polls can make a political
leader unwilling to propose innovative policies.
|
Remove preposition: Paying too
much attention to polls can make a political leader unwilling to propose innovative
policies. |
For doing freelance work for a competitor got Phil fired.
|
Remove preposition: Doing
freelance work for a competitor got Phil fired.
Rearrange: Phil got fired for doing freelance work for a
competitor. |
Return to the Top
Copyright (C)1999 by Purdue University. All rights reserved.
This document may be distributed as long as it is done entirely with all attributions to
organizations and authors. Commercial distribution is strictly prohibited. Portions of
this document may be copyrighted by other organizations.
|