Fragments and Run-On Sentences Introduction

Think you know your stuff? CLICK HERE to quiz yourself.

Shmoop challenge: read the following chunk o' words out loud.

As you know a sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought every sentence must include a subject and a predicate sentence fragments and run-on sentences are incorrect sentences.

Besides noticing the inherent dryness of language used to talk about grammar (we like to think of it as good dry, like English wit or white wine or kindling), you probably noticed how very long that sentence was. Your voice got a little drone-y.

That's because it wasn't a well-formed sentencethat you read. It was a run-on sentence. They're as unalike as leopards and leopard seals. Scary leopard seals.

Which brings us to…

"Scary leopard seals." commits the crime of being a sentence fragment. It is the Lucky Charms "part" of "part of a complete breakfast."

Just like you can't just eat a bowl of delicious freeze-dried marshmallows and expect to not be hungry forty-five minutes later, you can't just throw out a sentence fragment and expect to get away with it on, say, the SAT.

That's what Shmoop is here for.

Quiz Yourself on Fragments and Run-On Sentences

1/5

Can you name the error in the following sentence?


At Camp Tahoe, campers can enjoy the great outdoors by swimming or canoeing in our beautiful mountain lake, they may also hone their beading and lanyard skills in Big Bertha's Craft Barn.


(A) faulty parallelism
(B) dangling modifier
(C) run-on sentence
(D) misplaced modifier

Which of the following would be an appropriate way to correct this sentence?


Jeanne was excited to see the fall colors during her November visit to the United States, however, she didn't realize that the native trees of the region she had planned to visit were mostly conifers.


(A) Change the first comma to a semicolon.
(B) Change had planned to planned.
(C) Change the first comma to a period and capitalize however
(D) Both A and C

Which of these is a sentence fragment?

(A) Run!
(B) Man-eating tiger!
(C) Over there!
(D) Both B and C

Which of these is a run-on sentence?

(A) I am waiting for my sister she's running late because her son dumped a plate of spaghetti on her white carpet.
(B) I guess I can forgive him he's only two.
(C) And I did the same thing just last week.
(D) Both A and B
(E) A, B, and C

Which of these sentences incorrectly begins with that?

(A) That isn't the way my mother taught me to behave.
(B) That napkin should go on your lap, young man.
(C) That the food doesn't dirty your bespoke pants.
(D) Both B and C

Here are your results. Want to give it another go?
Click TRY AGAIN for a new quiz. Or click NEXT to get to studying.

0/5