Keep yours concise, using three or four
sentence fragments with third - person verbs.
Not exact matches
During the Georgetown - North Carolina game he began a whopping 38 % of his
sentences (or, more accurately,
sentence fragments)
with and.
Sucking away when she pops off to mention something in a
fragmented toddler
sentence, look at me in her sweet gaze for comprehension and then relatch to continue all leaves me
with a head - shaking the feeling of «did she just TALK to me?
Too bad, it was sprinkled
with bad grammar, superfluous words, and
fragmented sentences.
Whether in the script stage, where the words he co-authored
with regular partner Craig Pearce were penned
with a grating affectation (undoubtedly to mimic Fitzgerald's prose), or during post-production, where those words are forced into the background amidst arrhythmic camerawork and
fragmented editing, the director determinedly refuses to let his cast construct and finish
sentences.
It starts
with a short review of
sentence fragments, run - on
sentences, and complete
sentences that includes a
sentence sorting activity.
, and everyone cheering and waving because the Girl Who Didn't Know What
Sentence Fragments Were, has now used them judiciously and
with aplomb!
The Hidden Object Scenes are varied
with Interactive List finds, Multiples of the same item finds, Keywords in
sentence finds,
Fragment finds, and one of my personal favorites, Interactive, Progressive Silhouetted Shape finds where you find the first item that matches the Silhouetted Shape, and then use that item back in the scene logically, which exposes the next item and so forth.
The
fragmented sentences offer insight into Mwangi's experiences
with stereotypes and discrimination after leaving Kenya for Germany.
Context as in who this person was and in what capacity they were talking, whether this was an official press release or an off - the - cuff comment, what else was said along
with these two extracted
sentence fragments which might moderate or clarify the message.
147 Johnson, supra note 31, at 156 (discussing breaking the rules
with an example of the «unfinished message» trope: «The three worst mistakes you can make are overpromising and underdelivering»); Clark, supra note 32, at 82 — 84 (describing
sentence fragments as a way of artfully breaking the rules in contrasting
with an earlier longer
sentence).
Fragment sentences and ending
sentences with a preposition are acceptable, if it sounds natural in spoken dialog.
Instead, write your bullet points in
sentence fragments e.g. «Successfully led a team of six to complete project X ahead of schedule» or «Proficient
with Microsoft Word, Excel, and Outlook».
Throughout your entire resume, beginning
with your summary, keep in mind that
sentence fragments are preferred over complete
sentences, and there's no place for first - person pronouns in your resume.
In favor or keeping a document short, a resume may include abbreviations, contractions,
fragmented sentences, along
with many other literary faux pas.
Professional Summary — Begin
with a short professional summary, and tailor this to the specific role you are applying for — Use
fragments rather than complete, wordy
sentences — Be concise and relevant — your summary should be roughly 50 words
Parallel structure means that your
sentences are written in alignment
with each other (such as
fragments that all begin
with nouns, or verb forms that consistently appear in past tense).
Notice that the statements are
sentence fragments that begin
with the job title, followed by experience and abilities.
The applicant begins
with his professional summary, and he effectively uses
sentence fragments to not waste words.
You have to begin
with a direct statement concerning the job you are applying for, even if you write a
sentence fragment for your own objective.
You can do simple bullet points
with short phrases, or you can go into more detail
with brief
sentence fragments in a functional resume.
If you view your resume summary as a first - person story
with the first - person pronouns removed, you'll end up
with concise
sentence fragments, which, in this case, are preferred over complete
sentences.
And then I came across one
fragment of a
sentence from columnist Tabatha Southey in the Grope and Flail, June 1, 2013: ``... it explains almost every left - wing protest I've attended — the ones
with lots of people and no good chants, where half the attendees think that the crowd should march to another location and the rest are still trying to get their candles lit.»