English Sentence Structure: Simple, Compound, Complex & More
English Sentence Structure: Simple, Compound, Complex & More
Learn how to build all four sentence types with confidence - including clause analysis, connector tables, and targeted fixes for the most common structural errors.
Why Sentence Structure Matters
Grammar accuracy means more than correct verb tenses. How you build your sentences affects clarity, flow, and the impression your writing and speech makes. Short, simple sentences alone sound choppy. Long sentences without clear structure become confusing. The solution is control: knowing how to build each sentence type and choosing the right one for the context.
English sentences are built from clauses. A clause has a subject and a verb. The type of sentence depends on which clauses you use and how you connect them.
| Sentence type | Clauses used | Connector type |
|---|---|---|
| Simple | 1 independent clause | none needed |
| Compound | 2+ independent clauses | coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS) or semicolon |
| Complex | 1 independent + 1+ dependent | subordinating conjunction or relative pronoun |
| Compound-complex | 2+ independent + 1+ dependent | both types above |
Independent and Dependent Clauses
Before you can understand sentence types, you need to understand the difference between the two main clause types.
A complete thought that can stand alone as a sentence
"She studies English every morning."
"The meeting was cancelled."
This is a complete sentence. It has a subject, a verb, and delivers a full meaning.
A clause that cannot stand alone - it needs an independent clause
"Although she studies every morning..." (incomplete - what happens?)
"Because the meeting was cancelled..." (incomplete - so what?)
These fragments need a main clause to complete the meaning. Leaving them alone is a sentence fragment error.
If you read a clause out loud and it still feels unfinished - as if the listener is waiting for more - it is probably a dependent clause. Add it to an independent clause or rewrite it as an independent clause.
Simple Sentences
A simple sentence has one independent clause. It can have multiple subjects, multiple verbs, or long phrases - as long as there is only one independent clause.
"Ali passed the exam."
"Ali and Sara passed the exam." (compound subject - still simple)
"Ali passed the exam and celebrated with his friends." (compound predicate - still simple)
Simple sentences are powerful for emphasis. A short, direct sentence after a complex idea drives the point home. But a paragraph of only simple sentences feels elementary and lacks flow.
Compound Sentences
A compound sentence joins two or more independent clauses. Each clause could stand alone, but combining them shows a logical relationship between the ideas.
"I wanted to speak more, but I felt nervous."
"She finished the course, and she immediately applied for a job."
"He didn't study, so he failed the test."
FANBOYS: The 7 Coordinating Conjunctions
| Conjunction | Relationship | Example |
|---|---|---|
| For | reason (formal) | He left early, for he had a flight to catch. |
| And | addition | She studied hard, and she passed. |
| Nor | negative addition | He didn't call, nor did he send a message. |
| But | contrast | The exam was long, but I finished it. |
| Or | alternative | Study now, or you will regret it tonight. |
| Yet | contrast (formal) | She worked hard, yet she didn't get promoted. |
| So | result | I was late, so I ran to the classroom. |
When joining two independent clauses with a coordinating conjunction, place a comma before the conjunction: "I studied hard, but I was still nervous." Without the conjunction, use a semicolon: "I studied hard; I was still nervous."
Run-on error: "I studied hard I passed the exam." (no connector or punctuation)
Correct: "I studied hard, and I passed the exam." / "I studied hard; I passed the exam." / "I studied hard. I passed the exam."
Complex Sentences
A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent clause. The dependent clause shows a relationship - cause, time, condition, contrast - more precisely than a coordinating conjunction can.
or
Subordinating conjunction + dependent clause, + independent clause
"I improved quickly because I practised every day."
"Although I was nervous, I started the conversation."
"The teacher corrected my pronunciation whenever I made an error."
Subordinating Conjunctions by Relationship
| Relationship | Conjunctions | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Cause / reason | because, since, as | Because I practised daily, I improved quickly. |
| Contrast | although, though, even though, while, whereas | Although the grammar is complex, the rules are learnable. |
| Condition | if, unless, provided that, as long as | Unless you practise speaking, you won't improve. |
| Time | when, whenever, before, after, while, as soon as, until | Before I speak, I take a moment to organise my thoughts. |
| Purpose | so that, in order that | I take notes so that I can review them later. |
| Result | so...that, such...that | She spoke so clearly that everyone understood her. |
Relative Clauses
Relative clauses are a special type of dependent clause that modify a noun. They are introduced by relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, that.
| Relative pronoun | Used for | Example |
|---|---|---|
| who | people (subject) | The teacher who helped me is from London. |
| whom | people (object, formal) | The teacher whom I admire has 20 years of experience. |
| whose | possession | The student whose grammar improved got the certificate. |
| which | things / non-defining | The course, which lasts 3 months, is very practical. |
| that | people and things / defining | The method that I use involves daily speaking practice. |
A defining clause identifies which one you mean - no commas: "The student who works hardest will succeed." A non-defining clause adds extra information about something already identified - use commas: "My teacher, who has 15 years of experience, gave me excellent feedback." Do not use "that" in non-defining clauses.
Compound-Complex Sentences
A compound-complex sentence combines the features of both: it has two or more independent clauses AND at least one dependent clause. This is the most sophisticated sentence structure, used for precise, nuanced writing.
"I worked hard on my pronunciation, and my confidence grew because I could see real progress."
"Although the exam was difficult, she finished all the questions and she felt confident about her answers."
Use compound-complex sentences to express multi-part ideas with clear logical connections. Overusing them makes text feel dense; aim for variety across all four sentence types.
Sentence Variety: Why It Matters
Strong writers and speakers use all four sentence types deliberately. The table below shows a revision process from a flat, repetitive paragraph to a varied, professional one.
| Before (all simple) | After (mixed types) |
|---|---|
| I started studying English. I was nervous. I made a lot of mistakes. I kept practising. I improved. | When I started studying English, I was nervous and made many mistakes. However, I kept practising, and my confidence gradually grew. |
The revised version uses a complex sentence, a compound sentence, and varied connectors. It covers the same information in fewer words and reads far more fluently.
Common Errors for Arabic and French Speakers
| Error type | Example | Fix | L1 cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Run-on sentence | "I was late I missed the bus." | Add conjunction or full stop | Arabic paratactic chaining with wa |
| Overuse of "and" | "I went to class and I listened and I took notes and I practised." | Use subordination: "I listened carefully in class, took notes, and practised what I had learned." | Arabic coordinate style; French oral style |
| Sentence fragment | "Because I was tired." (left alone) | "Because I was tired, I left early." | Subordinator treated as an independent sentence |
| Double subject | "My teacher, she explained very well." | "My teacher explained very well." | Arabic pronoun resumption pattern (subject + pronoun) |
| Comma splice | "I studied hard, I passed the test." (comma without conjunction) | "I studied hard, and I passed the test." or "I studied hard; I passed the test." | French uses commas more freely between clauses; direct transfer |
| Wrong relative pronoun | "The book which I read it..." | "The book which I read..." (remove resumptive pronoun) | Arabic relative pronoun + resumptive pronoun pattern (allathi...hu) |
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Grammar Guides
Subject-verb agreement, articles, tenses - the foundational rules.
Zero, first, second, third, and mixed conditionals with decision tree.
All 12 tenses with usage notes and priority levels for B1-C1 learners.
Proven study techniques for making grammar stick in real communication.
Build Better Sentences With Live Practice
Understanding sentence types is step one. Using them fluently in real-time conversation is what B1-C1 learners actually need. Direct English Live gives you structured speaking and writing practice with expert feedback - designed specifically for learners like you.
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