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Using Semicolons in a Series

While most series use a comma to separate the elements, sometimes a semicolon is necessary. This worksheet asks your student to insert a semicolon in the correct place in a variety of sentences. It’s ...

Title of Works: Quotation Marks vs. Italics or Underlining.

Slightly more advanced, this worksheet asks your student to rewrite the titles of works using either quotation marks or underlining (or italics if typed). In this exercise, she won’t have a reference ...

Subject or Predicate: What’s Missing?

Many sentence fragments are missing a subject or predicate. This subject and predicate worksheet has multiple sentences fragments, and your student is asked to identify which is missing. It’s great pr ...

Sentence Fragments: Add the Missing Subject

This worksheet features a variety of sentence fragments that are missing subjects. Your youngster will rewrite each sentence adding a subject. That’s grammar practice and writing practice in one! Use ...

Sentence Diagramming: The Understood You

Some sentences, like commands, have a subject that is not stated but is understood by the reader or listener. This is called an understood subject or understood you. When you diagram a sentence with a ...

Sentence Fragment Worksheet: Add the Missing Predicate

Time to add some missing predicate! The sentence fragments in this worksheet are in search of a predicate. It’s your student’s task to add that vital piece. As a practice for Common Core Standards for ...

Sentence Diagramming: The Expletive There

In grammar an expletive, sometimes called a dummy subject, is a word that looks like the subject of a sentence, but instead has no real meaning. The most common expletive is there, and it is usually f ...

Sentence Diagramming: Negatives

Negatives, such as not or no, are usually used in a sentence as an adverb or adjective. They are placed under the word they modify. This includes n’t when it is used as a contraction. This sentence di ...

Sentence Diagramming: Appositives

An appostive is a word or phrase that renames a noun. An appositive in a sentence is put in parentheses after the noun it renames. Any modifiers of the appositive are put under the appositive like any ...

Sentence Diagramming: Direct Address

A direct address is when a speaker names the person to whom he is speaking. In sentence diagramming, the direct address has no particular meaning to the sentence, so the name is put above the subject. ...

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