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Grammar: Simple Sentences Part One
What Is a Simple Sentence?
A simple sentence is a sentence made up of just one independent clause. An independent clause is a group of words that has a subject and a verb and expresses a complete idea. It can stand alone as a complete sentence. Even if the sentence includes objects, adverbs, or prepositional phrases, it’s still a simple sentence as long as there is just one independent clause.
Key features of simple sentences:
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One independent clause only (no dependent or subordinate clauses)
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Must include a subject and a verb
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Can include objects or additional phrases, but still stays as one clause
Examples of Simple Sentences
Here are some simple sentences, with explanations:
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He plays football.
This sentence has one subject (“he”) and one verb (“plays”). It’s short but complete. -
The children are watching a movie.
Even though it’s longer, it still has just one independent clause: one subject (“the children”) and one verb (“are watching”). -
She studied hard for the exam yesterday.
This includes a time phrase (“yesterday”) and an object (“for the exam”), but there is still only one clause.
How Is a Simple Sentence Different from a Compound Sentence?
A compound sentence has two or more independent clauses. Each clause could be a simple sentence on its own, but they are joined together using a coordinating conjunction like and, but, or so.
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Simple: I like tea.
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Compound: I like tea, and I also like coffee.
→ This has two independent clauses joined with “and”:-
I like tea.
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I also like coffee.
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In a compound sentence, both parts make complete sense on their own, but are linked to show a connection.
How Is a Simple Sentence Different from a Complex Sentence?
A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent (subordinate) clause. A dependent clause cannot stand alone — it needs the main clause to make sense.
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Simple: He went home.
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Complex: He went home because he was tired.
→ The part “because he was tired” is a dependent clause. It gives more information but cannot stand alone.
In complex sentences, common subordinating conjunctions include because, although, if, when, while, and since.
Summary
To summarize the differences:
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Simple sentence: One independent clause (e.g. The cat slept.)
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Compound sentence: Two or more independent clauses joined by and, but, or, etc. (e.g. The cat slept, and the dog barked.)
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Complex sentence: One independent clause plus one or more dependent clauses (e.g. The cat slept because it was tired.)
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Earned Point(s): 0 of 0, (0) Choose the correct answer. Only one is correct. 1. Which of these is a simple sentence? 2. Which sentence has two independent clauses? 3. What is a dependent clause? 4. What is a compound sentence made of? 5. Which is a subordinating conjunction? Complete each sentence with a clause from the word bank. Each sentence must be a simple sentence (only one independent clause). Word Bank: 6. My brother . 7. It . 8. She after school. 9. The baby is . 10. He quietly before leaving. Match each sentence to its correct sentence type.IELTS Master Class
Week 1
Exam Practice
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was raining hard | loves chocolate | closed the door | went to the library | very tired
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