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Mastering Sentence Structure







Understanding Clauses - Your Building Blocks
Every great sentence starts with understanding clauses. Think of them as the LEGO blocks of writing - once you get these, everything else clicks into place.
A clause is simply a group of words with a subject (who's doing something) and a verb (what they're doing). There are two types you absolutely need to know: independent clauses and dependent clauses.
Independent clauses are complete thoughts that can stand alone as sentences. "The bus arrived on time" makes perfect sense by itself. Dependent clauses, however, are incomplete thoughts that need help - they often start with words like because, when, or although. "Because the traffic was light" leaves you hanging - what happened because of this?
💡 Quick Check: If you can read a clause out loud and it sounds complete, it's independent. If it sounds like you're trailing off, it's dependent!

Simple and Compound Sentences
Simple sentences are your foundation - just one independent clause doing its job. "I studied for my Irish exam" or "The rain fell heavily all afternoon" are perfect examples. Don't underestimate these; they pack punch when used strategically.
Compound sentences step things up by joining two independent clauses of equal importance. You can connect them using FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) with a comma, or use a semicolon if the ideas are closely related.
"I wanted to go to the match, but I had too much homework" shows two equally important ideas connected. The semicolon version might look like: "The concert was sold out; we couldn't get tickets."
💡 Pro Tip: Use compound sentences when you want to show balance or contrast between two ideas - perfect for argumentative essays!

Complex and Compound-Complex Sentences
Complex sentences are where you start showing real sophistication. These combine one independent clause with at least one dependent clause, creating hierarchy in your ideas.
The comma rule is crucial here: if your dependent clause comes first, use a comma. "Although it was cold, we still went for a walk." If the independent clause leads, usually no comma needed: "We went for a walk although it was cold."
Compound-complex sentences are the ultimate show-offs - they combine everything. You get two or more independent clauses plus dependent clauses. "When the power went out, I lit some candles, and my brother looked for a torch" demonstrates real control over language.
💡 Exam Strategy: Use at least one complex or compound-complex sentence per paragraph to impress examiners and show your writing skills!

Breaking Down Sentences Like a Pro
Let's practise with real examples so you can identify sentence types confidently. Take this monster: "Because I was tired, I went to bed early, but I couldn't fall asleep."
First, find your clauses: "Because I was tired" (dependent), "I went to bed early" (independent), and "I couldn't fall asleep" (independent). Count them up: one dependent + two independent = compound-complex.
Now try this simpler one: "The history teacher gave us a difficult essay for homework." Just one complete thought with subject (teacher) and verb (gave) = simple sentence.
The secret is breaking everything down systematically. Find your subjects and verbs first, then identify whether each clause can stand alone.
💡 Practice Tip: Start by covering up parts of sentences to see if they make sense alone - this helps you spot independent vs dependent clauses quickly!

Avoiding Common Mistakes
Comma splices are essay killers - never join two independent clauses with just a comma. "The film was brilliant, I would definitely recommend it" is wrong. Fix it by adding "and" after the comma, using a semicolon, or making one clause dependent.
Run-on sentences smash independent clauses together without any punctuation: "We went to Dublin for the day we saw the Book of Kells." Your reader gets lost trying to figure out where one idea ends and another begins.
Sentence fragments happen when you write dependent clauses as complete sentences. "Because I forgot my lunch money" isn't finished - it needs an independent clause to complete the thought.
💡 Quick Fix: Read your sentences aloud. If you naturally pause or your voice rises like you're asking a question, you probably need punctuation or more words to complete the thought!

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Uygulama çok kolay kullanılıyor ve güzel tasarlanmış. Şu ana kadar aradığım her şeyi buldum ve sunumlardan çok şey öğrendim! Kesinlikle ödevlerim için hep kullanacağım!
Uygulama çok iyi. Çok fazla ders notu ve yardımlaşma var. Örneğin benim problem yaşadığım bir ders Geometriydi ve ANINDA yardım ettiler beraber hem sorularımı çözdük hem konu anlatımı buldum. Herkese tavsiye ederim.
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Mastering Sentence Structure
Want to make your essays sound more sophisticated and score better marks? Understanding sentence structureis your secret weapon for improving your writing, especially for the PCLM section in English exams. Instead of using boring simple sentences all the time,...

Understanding Clauses - Your Building Blocks
Every great sentence starts with understanding clauses. Think of them as the LEGO blocks of writing - once you get these, everything else clicks into place.
A clause is simply a group of words with a subject (who's doing something) and a verb (what they're doing). There are two types you absolutely need to know: independent clauses and dependent clauses.
Independent clauses are complete thoughts that can stand alone as sentences. "The bus arrived on time" makes perfect sense by itself. Dependent clauses, however, are incomplete thoughts that need help - they often start with words like because, when, or although. "Because the traffic was light" leaves you hanging - what happened because of this?
💡 Quick Check: If you can read a clause out loud and it sounds complete, it's independent. If it sounds like you're trailing off, it's dependent!

Simple and Compound Sentences
Simple sentences are your foundation - just one independent clause doing its job. "I studied for my Irish exam" or "The rain fell heavily all afternoon" are perfect examples. Don't underestimate these; they pack punch when used strategically.
Compound sentences step things up by joining two independent clauses of equal importance. You can connect them using FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) with a comma, or use a semicolon if the ideas are closely related.
"I wanted to go to the match, but I had too much homework" shows two equally important ideas connected. The semicolon version might look like: "The concert was sold out; we couldn't get tickets."
💡 Pro Tip: Use compound sentences when you want to show balance or contrast between two ideas - perfect for argumentative essays!

Complex and Compound-Complex Sentences
Complex sentences are where you start showing real sophistication. These combine one independent clause with at least one dependent clause, creating hierarchy in your ideas.
The comma rule is crucial here: if your dependent clause comes first, use a comma. "Although it was cold, we still went for a walk." If the independent clause leads, usually no comma needed: "We went for a walk although it was cold."
Compound-complex sentences are the ultimate show-offs - they combine everything. You get two or more independent clauses plus dependent clauses. "When the power went out, I lit some candles, and my brother looked for a torch" demonstrates real control over language.
💡 Exam Strategy: Use at least one complex or compound-complex sentence per paragraph to impress examiners and show your writing skills!

Breaking Down Sentences Like a Pro
Let's practise with real examples so you can identify sentence types confidently. Take this monster: "Because I was tired, I went to bed early, but I couldn't fall asleep."
First, find your clauses: "Because I was tired" (dependent), "I went to bed early" (independent), and "I couldn't fall asleep" (independent). Count them up: one dependent + two independent = compound-complex.
Now try this simpler one: "The history teacher gave us a difficult essay for homework." Just one complete thought with subject (teacher) and verb (gave) = simple sentence.
The secret is breaking everything down systematically. Find your subjects and verbs first, then identify whether each clause can stand alone.
💡 Practice Tip: Start by covering up parts of sentences to see if they make sense alone - this helps you spot independent vs dependent clauses quickly!

Avoiding Common Mistakes
Comma splices are essay killers - never join two independent clauses with just a comma. "The film was brilliant, I would definitely recommend it" is wrong. Fix it by adding "and" after the comma, using a semicolon, or making one clause dependent.
Run-on sentences smash independent clauses together without any punctuation: "We went to Dublin for the day we saw the Book of Kells." Your reader gets lost trying to figure out where one idea ends and another begins.
Sentence fragments happen when you write dependent clauses as complete sentences. "Because I forgot my lunch money" isn't finished - it needs an independent clause to complete the thought.
💡 Quick Fix: Read your sentences aloud. If you naturally pause or your voice rises like you're asking a question, you probably need punctuation or more words to complete the thought!

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Knowunity yapay zeka arkadaşı nedir?
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Aradığını bulamıyor musun? Diğer derslere göz at.
Kullanıcılarımızdan yorumlar. Onlar her şeyi çok beğendi — sen de beğeneceksin.
Uygulama çok kolay kullanılıyor ve güzel tasarlanmış. Şu ana kadar aradığım her şeyi buldum ve sunumlardan çok şey öğrendim! Kesinlikle ödevlerim için hep kullanacağım!
Uygulama çok iyi. Çok fazla ders notu ve yardımlaşma var. Örneğin benim problem yaşadığım bir ders Geometriydi ve ANINDA yardım ettiler beraber hem sorularımı çözdük hem konu anlatımı buldum. Herkese tavsiye ederim.
BEN ŞOK. Reklamını sık sık gördüğüm için uygulamayı denedim ve gerçekten hayran kaldım. Bu uygulama okul için tam ihtiyacım olan şey. Anında ödev yardımı, konu anlatımı, örnek sınavlar, flaşkartlar hepsi hepsi var, şiddetle tavsiye ederim ✅