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Every English sentence falls into one of four structural categories based on its clause composition. Understanding these types helps you write with more variety and control. The checker classifies each sentence in your text and shows you the overall distribution.
A simple sentence has one independent clause with a subject and a predicate: "The quarterly report is ready." Simple sentences can include compound subjects ("The manager and the director approved the plan") or compound verbs ("The system logs errors and sends alerts"), but they contain only one independent clause and no dependent clauses.
A compound sentence joins two or more independent clauses with a coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) or a semicolon: "The data was promising, but the sample size was small." Both clauses can stand alone as complete sentences.
A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent clause: "Because the server crashed, the team lost two hours of work." The dependent clause ("Because the server crashed") cannot stand on its own and relies on the independent clause for meaning.
A compound-complex sentence has at least two independent clauses and at least one dependent clause: "Although the deadline was tight, the team finished the project, and the client approved the final version." These sentences handle multiple related ideas in a single construction.
Writing that relies too heavily on one sentence type feels unbalanced. Too many simple sentences create a choppy, simplistic rhythm. Too many complex or compound-complex sentences make text feel dense and hard to follow. A healthy mix across all four types gives writing a natural flow that holds the reader's attention.
Paste your text above to see each sentence classified by type, with a summary showing your overall distribution and tips for improving the balance.
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