Diagramming PDF
Diagramming PDF
Diagramming PDF
Chapter 2
Sentence Patterns
Think about the different types of possibilities involved in a football play. When
the center hikes the ball to the quarterback, the quarterback passes it to a receiver,
hands it off, or perhaps keeps the ball himself and runs with it. Those who really
understand football, however, know that only a limited number of patterns are pos-
sible in the game. English sentences use a limited number of patterns as well. In
this chapter, you will learn the five basic English sentence patterns. The first type
is the Subject/Verb pattern.
S V
The ancient plumbing leaked badly.
S V
The noisy frog in the pond croaked throughout the night.
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12 Chapter 2
PRACTICE SET 21
Directions: In the following sentences, underline the simple subjects once and the
verbs twice.
Example: Ethan stood in the corner.
1. My mother retired.
5. Beside the beautiful statue in the park, the pigeon found some popcorn.
subject verb
In the sentence Fido barks, you already know that barks is the verb. To determine
the subject, ask, Who or what barks? The answer is Fido. The simple subject is
Fido, so Fido goes in the subject part of the diagram. Note that all capitalized words
in the sentence are also capitalized on the diagram frame.
Directions: Place the simple subject and verb in their appropriate places on the
diagram frames. Draw the diagrams on a separate sheet of paper.
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1. Hector sneezed.
PRACTICE SET 23
14 Chapter 2
Quick Tip
Verbs that take direct objects are called transitive verbs. Verbs that do not
take direct objects are called intransitive verbs. To determine whether a verb
is transitive, remember to ask whom or what? after it, not how? or when?
I ate the sandwich.
I ate what? I ate the sandwich. In this sentence, ate is a transitive verb.
I ate quickly.
Does quickly tell whom or what? No, it tells how. In this sentence, ate is an
intransitive verb.
PRACTICE SET 24
Directions: In the sentences below, underline the simple subject once and the verb
twice. Write DO above the direct object.
DO
Example: Tyler left the company.
PRACTICE SET 25
Directions: In the sentences below, identify the pronouns and indicate whether
they are being used as subjects or direct objects.
Examples:
Place a short vertical line after the verb and then add the direct object. Notice
that the line dividing the subject and the verb crosses through the horizontal base
line to separate the words belonging to the subject from the words belonging to
the predicate. However, to indicate that the direct object is part of the predicate,
the line separating the verb from the direct object stops at the horizontal line
rather than crossing through it. Look at the following diagram for placement:
Directions: For the sentences below, place the subjects, verbs, and direct objects
in their appropriate positions on the diagram frame. Draw the diagrams on a sepa-
rate sheet of paper.
Example: George ate too much candy. George ate candy
1. Annie sang a lullaby.
5. Sophie happily completed the difficult assignment for her science teacher.
16 Chapter 2
Directions: Fill in the blanks below, using the cues to help you write your own
sentences in the Subject/Verb/Direct Object pattern. You may add a, an, or the if
needed.
____________ _ ____________
_ ___________ __
noun or pronoun verb noun or pronoun that
completes the thought
____________ _ ____________
_ ___________ __
noun or pronoun verb noun or pronoun that
completes the thought
_________________________________________
PRACTICE SET 27
In this sentence, sent is the verb. To find the subject, ask, Who or what sent?
The answer is I sent, so I is the subject. To find the direct object, ask, I sent
whom or what? I sent a gift, so gift is the direct object. To find the indirect
object, ask, To whom did I send the gift? I sent the gift to John, so John is the
indirect object.
To find the indirect object, ask the following questions about the verb:
To whom? I offered Lizzie a sandwich. =
I offered (to) Lizzie a sandwich.
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Quick Tip
In a sentence containing an indirect object, the words to or for do not actually
appear before the indirect object.
I sent John a gift contains an indirect object.
I sent a gift to John does not contain an indirect object.
18 Chapter 2
Quick Tip
Like subjects and direct objects, indirect objects are nouns or words that
function as nouns.
N N N
Winston taught Denny a song.
In addition, certain verbs, such as ask, bring, buy, give, send, show, teach, and
tell, often have indirect objects.
It is not possible to have an indirect object in a sentence that does not have
a direct object. For example, look at the sentence Glenna painted her teacher a
picture. If the direct object (a picture) is deleted, the sentence says, Glenna
painted her teacher.
Painted is the verb. Glenna painted, so Glenna is the subject. Remember to ask the
appropriate questions to distinguish the direct object from the indirect object. To
determine the direct object, ask, What did Glenna paint? Glenna painted the pic-
ture, so picture is the direct object. To determine the indirect object, ask for whom
Glenna painted. Glenna painted for her teacher, so teacher is the indirect object.
Here are some other examples in the Subject/Verb/Indirect Object/Direct Ob-
ject pattern:
S V IO DO
Dorothy offered Melanie an explanation.
S V IO DO
The actors gave the audience a hand.
S V IO DO
Marisol sent her friend a long letter.
PRACTICE SET 28
Directions: In the following sentences, underline the simple subjects once and the
verbs twice. Then label the indirect objects (IO) and direct objects (DO). Not all
sentences contain direct objects or indirect objects.
IO DO
Example: Asher gave his brother a book.
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Under the verb, place the indirect object on a horizontal line (____________)
attached to a backslash diagonal, which extends slightly below the horizontal line.
teacher
Directions: For the sentences below, place the subjects, verbs, indirect objects, and
direct objects in their appropriate positions on the diagram frame. Draw the
diagrams on a separate sheet of paper.
Example: The teacher gave the entire class a lecture.
2. The con man sold Carolyn some land in the Cypress Swamp.
20 Chapter 2
Directions: Fill in the blanks below, using the cues to help you write your own
sentences in the Subject/Verb/Indirect Object/Direct Object pattern. You may add
a, an, or the if needed.
______________________________________
Quick Tip
Object complements can be nouns, pronouns, or adjectives. When an adjec-
tive functions as the object complement, it describes the direct object before
it rather than renaming it:
I painted my nails green.
Painted is the verb. Who or what painted? I did, so I is the subject. What did
I paint? I painted my nails, so nails is the direct object. What did I paint them?
I painted them green, so green is the object complement, describing nails.
In addition, certain verbs, such as appoint, believe, call, choose, consider, elect,
keep, leave, make, name, paint, prove, select, think, turn, and vote, commonly
appear in patterns with object complements.
The verb is named. To find the subject, ask, Who or what named? The answer
is she named, so she is the subject. Now ask, Whom or what did she name? She
named the baby, so baby is the direct object. Any word following the direct object
that renames or describes the direct object is an object complement. She named
the baby Bruce, so Bruce is the object complement.
Here is another sentence in the Subject/Verb/Direct Object/Object Complement
pattern. To find the direct object, remember to ask whom or what? about the verb. To
find the object complement, remember to ask what? about the direct object.
what what
S V DO OC
The dye turned the shirt red.
Look at some more examples in this pattern:
S V DO OC (noun)
The panel selected Dong Li Miss Universe.
S V DO OC (adjective)
The doctor considered the patients feelings important.
S V DO OC (adjective)
The party at the amusement park made the little girls friends happy.
Be careful not to confuse sentences that look alike. Consider these two
2010 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
sentences:
He called the man a liar.
He called the man yesterday.
Man is the direct object in both sentences. In the first sentence, liar renames the
man, so it is the object complement. In the second sentence, yesterday is an adverb
that tells when he called the man. This sentence does not contain an object
complement.
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22 Chapter 2
Directions: In the following sentences, underline the simple subjects once and the
verbs twice. Then label the direct objects (DO) and object complements (OC).
DO OC
Example: We named our boat Hog Heaven.
The object complement follows a backslash placed next to the direct object.
Notice how the line points back to the direct object, the word the object comple-
ment renames or describes.
Directions: For the sentences below, place the subjects, verbs, direct objects, and
object complements in their appropriate positions on the diagram frame. Draw the
diagrams on a separate sheet of paper.
Example: We elected Jack secretary. We elected Jack secretary
5. The boss appointed his new secretary chairperson of the United Way campaign.
Directions: Fill in the blanks below, using the cues to help you write your own
sentences in the Subject/Verb/Direct Object/Object Complement pattern. You
may add a, an, or the if needed.
______________________________________
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24 Chapter 2
Quick Tip
A good trick to determine if a verb is a linking verb is to substitute the word
seems for the verb. If the sentence still makes sense, the verb is a linking verb.
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Directions: For the sentences below, underline the verbs twice and then deter-
mine whether the verbs are linking verbs or action verbs.
Examples:
a verb phrase:
verb phrase
I am running.
verb phrase
You were snoring.
You will learn more about verb phrases in Chapter 4.
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26 Chapter 2
Quick Tip
Dont confuse subject complements with direct objects. Direct objects follow
action verbs; subject complements follow linking verbs. Amelia Earhart was a
pilot. However, pilot is a subject complement, not a direct object, because it
follows the linking verb was. Pilot does not receive the action of the verb but,
instead, renames the subject, Amelia Earhart.
1. I am a baseball fan.
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Dont assume that all to be verbs are either linking verbs or part of a verb
Quick Tip phrase. A to be verb can also come before a word designating time or place:
The game was yesterday.
My doctor is away.
Words that designate time or place are adverbs. You will learn more about
them in Chapter 3.
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S LV SC (noun)
Jack became a tour director in Europe.
S LV SC (adjective)
She was alone for three years.
S LV SC (adjective)
The sky appeared black before the storm.
S LV SC (adjective)
Marianne looked healthy.
S LV SC (pronoun)
The person chosen in charge was he.
S V DO
S V SC
Directions: For the sentences below, place the subjects, verbs, and subject com-
plements in their appropriate positions on the diagram frame. Draw the diagrams
on a separate sheet of paper.
Example: The windows were foggy. windows were foggy
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28 Chapter 2
Directions: Fill in the blanks below, using the cues to help you write your own
sentences in the Subject/Linking Verb/Subject Complement pattern.
_________________________________________
PRACTICE SET 217
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Word Watchers 29
TEST YOURSELF
Directions: Identify the sentence patterns of the following sentences and write the
pattern on the lines provided.
Example: Kevin asked a silly question. S/V/DO
1. Arthur sold Ricky his old car.
WORD WATCHERS
Some words sound alike but have very different meanings. Be sure to use the
words that you mean.
accept/except Accept is a verb meaning to receive: I accept your apology.
Except is a preposition meaning but: Everyone was invited
except Tim.
affect/effect Both can mean influence. Affect is a verb: How does the
weather affect your mood?
2010 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
30 Chapter 2
WORD WATCHERS between/among Use between for two; use among for more than two:
(cont.) I divided the chores between the twins but among the
triplets.
capital/capitol The capital is a city; the capitol is a building: The capital of
Florida is Tallahassee; many state capitols have copper
domes.
choose/chose Choose, rhyming with fuse, means to select: Please choose
your partner.
Its past tense is chose, rhyming with hose: He chose the
same partner last week.
2. Mr. Callahan spread the workload (between/among) all of the students in the
class.
6. The senator gave his speech on the steps of the (capital/capitol) building.
8. The accident at the nuclear reactor had a devastating (affect/effect) on the village.