he gave me a story book sentence pattern
Answers
Answered by
4
Answer:
Hope it's helpful
Explanation:
Basic Sentence Patterns with examples. Subject + intransitive verb Elizabeth swims. Dolphins leap. Subject + transitive verb + direct object John hated lima beans
Answered by
1
Answer:
Sentence pattern- SVO
Explanation:
- In English, our sentences as a rule work utilizing a comparative example: subject, verb, then object.
- This sort of construction or pattern is that it allows our reader effectively to realize who is doing the activity and what the result of the activity is.
- A subject (S) in the sentence plays out the activity in a sentence.
- For example, in the sentence, "Maya eats a burger." Maya is the subject since she is the one eating the burger.
- A verb is a word that normally demonstrates an activity of some sort.
- There are two essential sorts of verbs in English: action verbs and connecting/ linking verbs.
- An action verb addresses something the subject of a sentence does, though a connecting verb interfaces the subject to a particular condition.
- All in all, a connecting verb depicts a subject as opposed to communicating an activity.
- Connecting verbs are likewise known as the condition of being verbs, and the most widely recognized one in English is the verb to be.
- In the above sentence, "Maya eats a burger." the verb is eating, which is an activity action verb since it lets us know what Maya does - she eats.
- An object ordinarily shows up after the verb. There are two kinds of articles in the English language: direct & indirect.
- A direct object demonstrates takes or receives the action of the verb. In other words, the subject of the sentence acts on the direct object.
- An indirect object tells us who or for whom an action is done/ finished.
- Now, let's analyse the given sentence, He gave me a storybook.
- Here, He- subject
gave- action verb
me- (indirect) object.
Therefore, the sentence pattern would be SUBJECT + VERB + OBJECT i.e. SVO.
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