English Sentence Structure - English Grammar Lesson

5,420,859 views ・ 2018-05-26

Oxford Online English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Hi, I’m Olivier.
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Welcome to Oxford Online English!
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In this lesson, you can learn about sentence structure in English.
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You’ll learn how to construct all kinds of sentences in English, from the simplest
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possible sentences, to long, complex sentences which contain many different ideas.
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To begin, a question:
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What’s the simplest sentence you can make in English?
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What does every sentence in English need?
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Every sentence needs a verb.
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The simplest sentence is an imperative, which means when you tell someone to do something.
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For example:
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Run!
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Leave!
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Work!
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These are the simplest complete sentences you can make in English; they’re just one
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word long!
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Of course, most sentences are longer than this.
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Most sentences that are longer than one word also need a noun before the verb.
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This noun is the subject.
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With a subject plus a verb, you can make simple sentences like:
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He runs.
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She left.
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They’re working.
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You can see that the verb can be in different forms: past or present, simple or continuous.
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The verb form doesn’t change the structure of the sentence.
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These are all the same: subject plus verb.
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Of course, these sentences aren’t very interesting.
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You can’t say much with short sentences like these.
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Let’s add a little more information.
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Take the sentence he runs.
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What could you add after runs to make it longer?
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You could add an adverb of place:
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He runs around the park.
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You could add an adverb of time:
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He runs every morning.
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You could add both:
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He runs around the park every morning.
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You could add an adverb of manner:
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He runs slowly.
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You can see that you have many choices, but your choices are also limited.
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In this case, you can use different kinds of adverbs, but there are also things you
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can’t use.
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For example, you can’t use another verb after run, you can’t use an adjective, and
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you can’t use a noun, or at least you can’t use a noun with this meaning of run.
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This is an important point, so let’s look at it in more detail.
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To build grammatically complete sentences in English, there’s one important question:
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what needs to come next?
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For example, you saw the sentence he runs.
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That’s a complete sentence.
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You can put a full stop after runs, and it’s correct.
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It’s very basic, but it’s correct.
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What about these:
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She likes He wants
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We go
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These aren’t complete sentences.
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Can you explain why not?
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They aren’t complete, very simply, because they aren’t finished.
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Look at the first sentence: She likes.
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She likes…what?
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She has to like something.
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He wants…
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What does he want?
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You can’t just ‘want’, you have to want something.
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We go…
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Where?
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At this point, we want to teach you a word: complement.
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The complement is the thing you add after a verb to make a sentence complete.
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A complement can have many different forms.
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It can be a noun, a verb, an adjective or an adverb.
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These things can be single words or phrases.
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For example, when we say ‘noun’, we also mean noun phrases.
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So, table is a noun, and the wooden table which my grandmother gave me is also a noun.
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Both nouns refer to one object—one table.
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For this lesson, a noun can be one word, or a phrase.
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Okay, let’s practice.
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Look at the first sentence: she likes.
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How could you finish this?
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What are the possible complements?
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Pause the video and write down three endings for your sentence.
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Try to use different ideas and structures.
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Ready?
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Let’s look at some possible answers.
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These are just our suggestions; of course there are many possibilities!
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She likes strawberries.
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She likes swimming.
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She likes getting up before the sun rises.
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She likes to listen to music while she works.
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You can see that there’s more than one possible complement: you can use a noun, a gerund (a
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verb with -ing which acts like a noun), a gerund phrase, or an infinitive verb with
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‘to’.
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So, you have many choices!
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However, like before, your choices are also limited.
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Only certain structures are possible.
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The idea of complements isn’t just for the first verb in the sentence.
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Many words need a complement.
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For example, look at one of the sentences you just saw:
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She likes getting up before the sun rises.
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Technically, you can say She likes getting up.
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It’s a grammatically complete sentence, but you’d never say it.
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Why not?
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Because it doesn’t make any sense.
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You need more information.
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She likes getting up… when?
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Why?
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How?
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You need a complement after getting up to complete the idea.
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She likes getting up before…
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Before also needs a complement.
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You can’t stop there.
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Before what?
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She likes getting up before the sun….
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This also doesn’t work, because it doesn’t make sense.
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It doesn’t make sense because the sun needs a complement.
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Before the sun does what?
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She likes getting up before the sun rises.
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Ok, finally we have a sentence which is both grammatically complete and which communicates
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meaning.
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What should you remember from this?
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Remember that when you use a particular word, you have limited choices in what kind of word
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you use next.
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To speak or write in clear, correct English, you don’t just need to know English words.
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You need to know what can come next.
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For example, with a verb like like or want, it’s not enough to know the verb.
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You also need to know whether the verb needs a complement, and what complements are—or
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aren’t—possible.
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This is why it’s good to learn vocabulary in full phrases and sentences.
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That way, you’ll know how to use the words you learn to make sentences you can use in
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your spoken or written English.
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Using what you’ve seen up to now, you can build many simple English sentences.
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Let’s see how you can add more information and more detail to these simple sentences.
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You can add information to a simple sentence in two ways: you can add adjectives or adverbs.
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Let’s look at an example, using a sentence we started before, but we didn’t finish:
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He wants…
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Actually, you should do some work!
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Pause the video, and finish this sentence in three different ways.
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Start again when you have your answers.
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Ready?
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Here’s our suggestion:
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He wants to buy a car.
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Now, let’s add some description using adjectives and adverbs.
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Can you see how you could add adjectives to this sentence?
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You could add adjectives before the word car, like this:
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He wants to buy a new car.
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He wants to buy a second-hand car.
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He wants to buy a bright red car.
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What about adverbs?
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Could you add adverbs to these sentences to add some details?
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There are many possibilities; for example:
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Apparently, he wants to buy a new car.
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He wants to buy a second-hand car next month.
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He wants to buy a bright red car for his new girlfriend.
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You can see that adverbs can be single words or phrases.
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Adjectives can go before the noun they describe, or after some verbs.
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Adverbs are more complicated, and can go in many different positions.
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However, this is the important point: using adjectives and adverbs like this doesn’t
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change whether a sentence is complete or not.
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If you say:
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He wants to buy a car.
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That’s a complete sentence.
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You can add adjectives and adverbs to it to make it more detailed:
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Apparently, he wants to buy a second-hand car for his new girlfriend.
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However, if a sentence is incomplete, then you can’t make it complete by adding adjectives
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or adverbs:
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He wants to buy…
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This sentence is incomplete.
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Adding adjectives and adverbs won’t make it complete.
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So, at this point, you can build a simple sentence.
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You also hopefully understand something about complements and why they’re important for
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making complete sentences, and now you can also add description to a complete sentence
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using adjectives and adverbs.
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Let’s see how you can combine these simple sentences into complex ones.
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First, let’s define some words.
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A conjunction is something which joins two sentences or two parts of a sentence together.
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Words like and, but, if, although, because or which are conjunctions.
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A complex sentence contains two or more parts joined with a conjunction.
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These parts are called clauses.
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An independent clause expresses a complete idea, and could stand by itself.
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A dependent clause would not make sense if it were by itself.
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A dependent clause depends on an independent clause in the same sentence in order to have
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meaning.
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Don’t worry if this is new—you don’t need to remember everything right now.
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You’ll see lots of examples of these ideas in this section and the next section, too.
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In this section, you’re going to learn about complex sentences with two independent clauses.
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Okay, enough abstract talk!
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Let’s see some examples:
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He runs around the park every morning, so he’s in pretty good shape.
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She likes strawberries, but she hardly ever eats them.
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You should write to her and thank her for the present.
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These are simple examples of complex sentences.
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Here’s your recipe: independent clause + conjunction + independent clause.
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You generally need a comma at the end of the first clause, before the conjunction, but
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comma rules are quite flexible in English, so you won’t always need a comma.
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Look at the first example:
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He runs around the park every morning, so he’s in pretty good shape.
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Which word is the conjunction?
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The conjunction is so.
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You can split this sentence into two full, meaningful sentences:
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Let’s look at one more:
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She likes strawberries, but she hardly ever eats them.
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Again, you can split this into two full sentences.
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You might think that the second sentence
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here isn’t complete or doesn’t make sense by itself.
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As it is, you’d be right.
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However, you can change them to strawberries, and then it’s a complete, meaningful sentence:
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But, she hardly ever eats strawberries.
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You can keep adding conjunctions and clauses for as long as you want:
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She likes strawberries, but she hardly ever eats them, and she doesn’t earn much money,
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so she has to be careful how much she spends on groceries, and fresh food is generally
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more expensive than canned or frozen produce, so…
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Of course, just because you can, it doesn’t mean it’s a good idea.
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Sentences with too many clauses are difficult to follow, so it’s generally better to limit
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your complex sentences to two or, maximum, three clauses.
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Now, you know how to build complex sentences using independent clauses.
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What about dependent clauses?
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Do you remember the definition of a dependent clause?
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A dependent clause is a part of a sentence which would not make sense by itself.
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Let’s see an example:
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She’s taller than I am.
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This short sentence has two clauses.
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Can you see where the two clauses start and end, and which one is dependent?
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The two clauses are:
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She’s taller.
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And: Than I am.
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They’re linked with the conjunction than.
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The second clause, than I am, is dependent.
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It doesn’t make sense by itself.
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Let’s see some other ways to build complex sentences with dependent clauses.
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You can add a dependent clause with conjunctions like if, because, although, unless, or wherever.
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For example:
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If you’re late, I’ll leave without you.
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He’s broke because he spent all his money on beer.
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Although she spends a lot of time at work, she doesn’t get much done.
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I won’t do it unless you come with me.
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We can meet wherever you want.
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Often, you can change the order of the two clauses if you want, so you can say:
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If you’re late, I’ll leave without you.
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Or: I’ll leave without you if you’re late.
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Notice that there’s a comma between the two clauses if the dependent clause is first,
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but not if the independent clause is first.
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What’s the difference between these complex sentences and the ones you saw in part four?
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Here, you can’t split the sentence in two.
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Well, you can, but one of the two parts won’t make sense:
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If you’re late.
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I’ll leave without you.
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I’ll leave without you is an independent clause, so it makes sense by itself.
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But the other clause—if you’re late—is dependent, and it doesn’t make sense by
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itself.
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It needs something more to make it complete.
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What other common ways are there to build complex sentences with dependent clauses?
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Another common structure is relative clauses, using relative pronouns like who, which or
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what to link two clauses.
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For example:
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That’s the guy who shouted at me.
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I have no idea what’s going on.
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They gave us a cake which was made from dried beetroot.
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In these cases, the dependent clause goes after the independent clause.
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Let’s review what you’ve learned in this lesson.
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You can build a very simple sentence, with just a verb:
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Work!
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You can add a subject and complement to make a simple sentence:
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She works in a zoo.
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You can use adjectives and adverbs to add description.
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Apparently, she works in a private zoo.
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You can make a complex sentence by adding a second independent clause, with a conjunction.
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Apparently, she works in a private zoo, so she must know a lot about animals.
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You can also make a complex sentence by adding a dependent clause, or even several dependent
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clauses, again using conjunctions to connect them.
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Apparently, she works in a private zoo, so she must know a lot about animals, which surprises
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me because as far as I know she studied economics at university, although I guess I could be
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wrong.
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This is a big topic, and it will take you time to learn everything about these points.
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Studying conjunctions and how they work can help you to build complex sentences which
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are clear and correct.
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Relative clauses are another useful topic if you want to improve your sentence grammar.
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Learning about relative clauses can help you to connect your ideas in complex sentences.
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It’s also a good idea to study verb complements and learn what structures you can or can’t
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use after a verb.
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Remember that a lot of sentence structure is being able to answer the question: “What
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needs to come next?”
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We hope this lesson was useful for you.
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Check out our website for more free English lessons: Oxford Online English dot com.
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Thanks for watching!
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See you next time!
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