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This Old-School Grammar Trick Will Make Your Life So Much Easier

Written By Unknown on Wednesday, October 1, 2014 | 9:41 AM

By Writer's Relief staff:



Back in ye olden days (okay, about thirty years ago) elementary school students were taught how to diagram sentences. The theory was that it would be easier to learn the parts of a sentence by seeing the underlying structure. However, as educators moved in the direction of free expression and away from basic mechanics, the diagramming system developed by Reed and Kellogg fell out of fashion.



But, like fresh apple pie made from scratch, sometimes sticking to the basics is best. Diagramming a sentence creates a clear visual that helps you analyze what you’re writing. So if you want to brush up on your fundamental sentence skills -- or you’re just a grammar nerd -- here’s a brief primer on how to diagram sentences.



How to Diagram A Sentence

Start with the key elements: subject and verb. Simply put, the subject tells you what the sentence is about; the verb tells you what the subject is doing. If you’re feeling rusty about identifying the different parts of a sentence, you may want to do a quick review before you attempt to diagram.



Here’s how to draw a diagram for a simple subject and main verb:



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If the sentence has a complement -- for action verbs, a direct object; for linking verbs, a subject complement -- you draw the diagram as follows:



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In other words...



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Next, things start to get interesting -- at least in our sentence diagram. Indirect objects and their linking verbs are placed on a line underneath the verb:



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And what about object complements? These are placed up on the main diagram line, but preceded by a cool slanted line:



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Woo-hoo! Now let’s get fancy with the adjectives and adverbs that modify the subject, verb, or direct object by placing them under the appropriate word on a slanted line:



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If you really want to live on the edge, you can diagram a declarative sentence with an understood subject, such as: Go away. Or you can diagram a question: Do you like pizza?



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Hold on to your hats, because as sentences become more complex, so do the diagrams. Some diagrams can flow across an entire page!



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Feeling adventurous? Take a look at Kitty Burns Florey’s diagram of a sentence from a speech by Sarah Palin.



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More Helpful Hints For Diagramming A Sentence




  • Always write the main sentence line first and then fill in the modifiers.



  • Don’t use punctuation, but do use capitalization and apostrophes.



  • Multiple-word proper nouns (names and titles) and hyphenated words are kept together as a single word.



  • When two different adjectives or adverbs modify the same word on the main sentence line, put them in the same left-to-right order as in the original sentence.






“I really do not know that anything has ever been more exciting than diagramming sentences.” -Gertrude Stein, Lectures in America



You may not feel quite as thrilled as Ms. Stein about the prospect of diagramming sentences, and we’ll let you draw your own conclusions as to how effective the technique is for improving your grammar skills. But if you’re interested in reading an in-depth study of sentence diagramming and learning more about its offbeat history, you should definitely check out Sister Bernadette’s Barking Dog by Kitty Burns Florey.


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