The Grammar Hierarchy
It can be helpful to think of English language consisting of a hierarchy:
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Sentences, clauses and phrases
A sentence expresses a complete idea. A written sentence usually begins with a capital letter and ends with a full stop, question mark or exclamation mark.
A sentence usually has a “subject” and a “predicate”.
The subject is a noun or pronoun identifying the person or thing that the sentence is about – often the person or thing that performs the action of the verb.
The predicate is everything else in a sentence apart from the subject.
A clause also expresses a complete idea. It can be a complete sentence or part of a sentence.
A clause usually includes a “subject” and a “predicate”.
A clause that is used as a complete sentence is called an “independent clause”.
When there is more than one clause in a sentence, at least one is the “main clause” while the others might be “subordinate clauses” (or “subsidiary clauses”).
A phrase is a group of words that does not contain both a subject and a verb, and therefore does not express a complete idea.
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The grammatical hierarchy illustrated
Word:
woman
Phrase:
the young woman
This has a noun, which might be a subject, but no verb. It therefore does not express a complete idea.
Clause:
the young woman answered the question
This could be an independent clause and used as a complete sentence.
Simple sentence:
The young woman answered the question.
This sentence has just one clause.
Complex sentence:
After she had thought for a while, the young woman answered the question.
This sentences has a main clause: the young woman answered the question, and a subsidiary clause: after she thought for a while.
Compound sentence:
The young woman answered the question and the audience applauded.
This sentence has two main clauses – the young woman answered the question and the audience applauded. Both could be independent clauses and complete sentences: The young woman answered the question. The audience applauded. They have been joined together by the conjunction “and”, to make things flow better.
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