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A complete sentence has three requirements: a subject (who or what the sentence is about), a predicate (what the subject does or is), and a complete thought. Sentences that miss any of these elements are fragments, and sentences that combine too many elements without proper punctuation are run-ons.
Fragments are incomplete sentences that get punctuated as if they were complete. "Running through the park on Saturday morning." has no main clause — it's a participial phrase with no subject performing the action. Fix: "She was running through the park on Saturday morning."
Run-on sentences join two or more independent clauses without proper punctuation or conjunctions. "The meeting ran long we missed lunch" needs either a period, semicolon, or conjunction between "long" and "we."
Some sentences start with a verb but lack a clear subject: "Went to the store and bought groceries." Who went? Adding "I" or "She" makes it complete.
"Because the deadline was moved up." This is a dependent clause that can't stand as its own sentence. It needs an independent clause: "We worked overtime because the deadline was moved up."
Fragments and run-ons confuse readers and undermine credibility in professional and academic writing. While intentional fragments work in creative writing and marketing, academic essays, business emails, and reports require complete sentences.
Paste your text above to identify fragments, run-ons, and other sentence completeness issues. Each finding includes a specific suggestion for how to fix it.
Try our grammar checker to catch errors automatically, or use the paraphrasing tool to improve sentence clarity.