Sentence fragments like «specialized in training employees to use proprietary software that resulted in a 15 percent reduction in data entry errors» work fine.
Include weirdly - phrased
sentence fragments like «run a chapter from it.»
Not exact matches
And it would be
like «
sentence fragment,» and since he had lower case it would be
like «capitalization,» and it was,
like, it clusters it all together and I can't always get rid of all of them...
On the other hand, the example Mr. Weber referred to,
like the one about the car crash, highlighted the inability of the ETS program to distinguish an inappropriate use of a
sentence fragment from one that was rhetorically effective for the content and the genre.
I will look for issues
like overused words, too many adverbs, purple prose,
sentence fragments, confusing
sentences, over or under describing, cliche phrases, awkward or unnatural dialogue, and anything else that prevents your prose from shining.
Then again, I can pick up a book
like Twilight or Fifty Shades on the first shelf I see in a major bookstore and find horrendous typos and
sentence fragments within the first paragraph.
Like a ghost, the voice we hear in «Uotpy» whispers, shouts and echoes the
fragments of two negative
sentences.
If you don't
like using
fragments, consider using shorter
sentences.