complex sentences

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Simple sentences The big dog was barking.

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Page 1: Complex sentences

Simple sentences

The big dog was barking.

Page 2: Complex sentences

Compound sentences

The boys walked down the road and their parents waved from the

house.

Page 3: Complex sentences

Complex sentences

A complex sentence contains one main clause that can make sense on its own, and one or more minor (subordinate) clauses that are linked to it.

When I arrived, the big dog was barking.The subordinate clause is When I arrived. Although it is

a clause with a subject and a verb, it doesn't make sense on its own, it needs a main clause.

Page 4: Complex sentences

More complex sentences

You can add more minor clauses to make a more complex sentence:When I arrived, the big dog was barking because it was lonely.We can even split the main clause with a minor clause and still have a complex sentence. When I arrived, the big dog which was lonely, was barking.

Page 5: Complex sentences

Alice entered the room (main clause)

• who was shaking with fear subordinate • although she was scared clauses • feeling full of confidence

• Write the above sentence using subordinate clauses in as many different ways as you can. You can split up Alice and entered the room.

Page 6: Complex sentences

Punctuating a subordinate clause

When you attach a subordinate clause in front of a main clause, use a comma, like this:

Even though the broccoli was covered in cheese, Emily refused to eat it.

When you attach a subordinate clause at the end of a main clause, you do not need to punctuate:

Jill did poorly in her English exam because her best friend kept her up too late the night before.

Page 7: Complex sentences

Relative clauses

Subordinate clauses can begin with a relative pronoun (who, whose, which) and so are called relative clauses. In this case, the punctuation gets a bit trickier. It depends on whether the information is essential for understanding or not.

For example:

Page 8: Complex sentences

Relative clauses

Nick gave a handful of chocolate to the dog who was sniffing around the table. (The information clarifies the animal so the clause is essential and requires no punctuation.)

Nick gave a handful of chocolate to Poppy, who was sniffing around the table. (We know which animal he means so the clause is not essential and therefore needs to be separated. It is used for additional, descriptive information)

Page 9: Complex sentences

OK, so why do I need to know all this?

Writers uses subordination to combine ideas and make them more effective:

Rhonda gasped. A six-foot snake slithered across the garden.

Rhonda gasped when a six-foot snake slithered across the garden.

Page 10: Complex sentences

Information flow

If two ideas have unequal importance, save the most important one for the end so that your reader remembers it best. E.g.

After eating his breakfast and cleaning his teeth, Guy Fawkes set off to blow up the Houses of Parliament.

Page 11: Complex sentences

Start with verb + ing

Compare: Liam realised he had finally been picked for the

team when he looked down the list for his name. With: Looking down the list for his name, Liam realised he

had finally been picked for the team.

Page 12: Complex sentences

Writer’s tactics

By using verb + ing our writer makes the reader feel more emotionally involved with Liam’s feelings. The reader can easily imagine Liam’s anticipation as he looks down the list. The order of words in the sentence is effective because the writer withholds the good news until the end!

Page 13: Complex sentences

Using this in your essays

Compare:The poet uses colloquial language in his poem

“The Man He Killed”. This suggests that the narrator is a working class man.

With:By using colloquial language in his poem “The

Man He Killed”, the poet suggests to the reader that the narrator is a working class man.

Page 14: Complex sentences

More examples

Compare:Shakespeare makes blunt, critical statements about his

mistress’s looks in “Sonnet 130”. She doesn’t match up to popular ideals of beauty in Elizabethan times. This goes against the reader’s expectations.

With:By highlighting his mistress’s faults in “Sonnet 130”,

Shakespeare goes against the reader’s expectations. Saying that she doesn’t match up to popular ideals of beauty in Elizabethan time, is his way of showing that she is beautiful in a more genuine way.

Page 15: Complex sentences

Don’t forget the comma

• Don’t forget, a clause beginning with an ing verb is a subordinate clause as it doesn’t make sense on its own, so it must have a comma before the rest of the sentence.

• Write your own sentence starting with ing.

Page 16: Complex sentences

Start with ed

Compare: Kylie decided to relax in the jacuzzi because she

was tired from the snowboarding. With: Tired from all the snowboarding, Kylie decided to

relax in the jacuzzi.

Page 17: Complex sentences

Writer’s tactics

Perhaps this writer thinks the most important information should come first – the fact that it’s snowboarding that has made Kylie tired. The writer is putting the order of events in the sentence in the same order that they happened in real –time snowboarding first followed by relaxing.

Write your own sentence using an ‘ed’ word e.g.Dressed or shouted at. Don’t forget the comma.