How to Fix Run-On Sentences, Fragments, and Clauses

You might be dealing with run-on sentences, clauses, or sentence fragments! Have you ever written a long, confusing sentence that seems to go on forever? Or maybe you’ve written a short sentence that feels incomplete?

Understanding these common grammar mistakes will help you write clearer, more professional sentences.

Run-on sentences – What they are and how to fix them
Fragments – How to turn incomplete thoughts into full sentences
Clauses – The building blocks of sentences

How to Fix Run-On Sentences

Meaning and How to Fix Run-on Sentences

A run-on sentence (also called a rambling sentence) happens when two or more sentences are incorrectly joined together without proper punctuation or a conjunction.

🚨 Example of a Run-On Sentence:

Sarah likes to go swimming she doesn’t know how to swim safely.

🔹 Why is this wrong?

There are two complete thoughts in one sentence, but they are not correctly separated.

🔹 Ways to Fix a Run-On Sentence:

Use a comma + coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)
Sarah likes to go swimming, but she doesn’t know how to swim safely.

Use a semicolon (;) if the sentences are closely related
Sarah likes to go swimming; she doesn’t know how to swim safely.

Use a period (.) to separate them into two sentences
Sarah likes to go swimming. She doesn’t know how to swim safely.


📌 Common Mistake: The “Comma Splice”

A comma splice is when two sentences are incorrectly joined with just a comma.

🚨 Example of a Comma Splice:

I bought a new purse today, I cannot wait for you to see it.

🔹 How to Fix It:

I bought a new purse today. I cannot wait for you to see it! (Use a period.)
I bought a new purse today, and I cannot wait for you to see it! (Use a conjunction.)
I bought a new purse today; I cannot wait for you to see it! (Use a semicolon.)


How to Fix Fragments

Meaning and How to Fix Sentence Fragments

A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence that is missing a subject, a verb, or both. It does not express a complete thought.

🚨 Example of a Sentence Fragment:

Did a horrible job mowing the lawn. (What’s missing? The subject!)

🔹 How to Fix It:

Tommy did a horrible job mowing the lawn. (Now it has a subject: “Tommy.”)


📌 More Examples of Sentence Fragments & Fixes

FragmentFixed Sentence
Because I was late.I was late because I missed the bus.
Walking through the park on a sunny day.I love walking through the park on a sunny day.
Even though she was tired.Even though she was tired, she finished her homework.

🔹 Key Point: A sentence needs a subject and a predicate to be complete!


How to Fix Clauses

Meaning and How to Fix Clauses

A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb. Clauses can be independent or dependent.

🔹 Independent Clause (Can Stand Alone) 🚀

An independent clause is a complete sentence. It has both a subject and a predicate and can stand alone.

Examples of Independent Clauses:

Katy is nice.
He loves playing basketball.
The sun is shining today.


🔹 Dependent Clause (Needs More Information) 🚨

A dependent clause has a subject and a verb but does not express a complete thought. It needs an independent clause to make sense.

🚨 Example of a Dependent Clause:
Molly picked blue. (Independent clause)
Because Molly picked blue. (Dependent clause – It feels unfinished!)

🔹 How to Fix It:
Because Molly picked blue, we painted the room blue. (Now it makes sense!)


📌 How to Identify Independent vs. Dependent Clauses

Clause TypeExample
IndependentShe loves coffee. (✅ Can stand alone.)
DependentBecause she loves coffee. (❌ Feels incomplete!)
Complete SentenceBecause she loves coffee, she drinks it every morning. (✅ Fixed!)

🔹 Key Point: A dependent clause must be connected to an independent clause!


Quick Recap: Run-On Sentences, Fragments, and Clauses

MistakeWhat It MeansHow to Fix It
Run-on SentenceTwo sentences joined incorrectlyUse a period, semicolon, or a comma with FANBOYS
Comma SpliceTwo sentences joined with just a commaAdd a conjunction or separate with punctuation
Sentence FragmentAn incomplete thought (missing subject/verb)Add the missing part to complete the sentence
Dependent ClauseA clause that cannot stand aloneConnect it to an independent clause

Explore More:

70 Types of Sentences – Basic Sentence Structure in English

“For…To” Sentence Structures in English

5/5 - (1 vote)
Sharing Is Caring:

You cannot copy content of this page

Index