E-Resource Center: John Jay College of Criminal Justice: City University of NY
You are viewing this site as a JJC student. Change
John Jay College of Criminal Justice City University of NY
Home Writing Tutorials Grammar Tutorials Course Tutorials CUNY Test Tutorials Major Advisement
Verb FormsVerb TenseNouns and ArticlesSubject Verb AgreementWord FormsSentence StructureSentence CombiningEditing Exercises
Grammar Tutorials
Sentence Structure Back to Exercise Menu

Introduction to Exercise 1 - Correct word order in sentences (basic rules)
Grammar Explanation

•  In English, most sentences follow this order:
Subject -> Verb Phrase -> Complement (the word or phrase after the verb). 
  • Example: Many students-> are working -> in part time jobs.
•  The subject of the sentence must always be a noun (e.g., students), a noun phrase (e.g., many students who attend CUNY), or a pronoun (e.g., they).
  • Incorrect: In the fall will be held the election.
  • Corrected: The election will be held in the fall.
•  Many verb phrases must include a helping verb before the main verb.
  • Incorrect: The candidates debating several issues.
  • Corrected: The candidates are debating several issues.

For additional explanation and practice, see Verb Forms: Exercise 1: Correcting verb phrases with a missing verb.

•  In direct questions, a verb comes before the subject except when the question word or phrase is the subject (e.g., Who won yesterday?).
  • Incorrect: Which debate she won.
  • Corrected: Which debate did she win?
•  In indirect questions (where the question word is in the middle of the sentence), the subject comes before, not after the verb.
  • Incorrect: The investigators did not discover why occurred the disaster.
  • Corrected: The investigators did not discover why the disaster occurred.
PDFDownload Grammar Explanation (PDF)
What You Will Do

The following passages contain sentences that are incomplete or have incorrect word order. Click on the sentence that contains the mistake. When you click, a box will appear. Correct the sentence and click the INSERT button. When you have finished making all the corrections, click DONE to compare WHAT YOU WROTE with WHAT WE WROTE.
continue to exercise
About Us | Site Map | Help | Center for English Language Support

Funded by the U.S. Department of Education (Title V) and the
New York State Education Department (Perkins III)

Bookmark and Share