Do you teach sentence patterns to your students outright? Most textbooks don’t deal with sentence patterns all at once, but I’ve found it really helps my students understand English better when I lay out the patterns for them. When English language learners have a basic understanding of sentence patterns and structures in English, they can recognize parts of speech and correct their mistakes more easily.
Basic Sentence Patterns
English uses a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) sentence pattern, but this is only the beginning. Let’s take a look at the patterns for the main parts of speech in English.
1. Nouns (S, O, N):
Nouns are people, places, or things. Nouns and pronouns can be subjects of a sentence, objects of a sentence, or objects of a preposition. Nouns are often preceded by an article (Art), including a, an, the, a number (one, two), a quantifier (many, a few), or a possessive adjective (my, their).
S + V + O |
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Art + N |
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2. Verbs (V):
Verbs are the action or state of being in a sentence. Verbs usually follow a subject and can be followed by an object. With imperative verbs, the subject is dropped.
S + V (+ O) |
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V (+ O) |
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3. Adjectives (Adj):
Adjectives describe nouns and have two common patterns in English.
Adj + N |
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BE + Adj |
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4. Adverbs (Adv):
Adverbs can describe verbs, adjectives, other adverbs, or even the whole sentence. For more details and examples, see 7 Adverb Patterns.
Adv + V |
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V + Adv |
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V + Adv + V |
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Adv + Adv |
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Adv + Adj |
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Adv + S + V + O |
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S + V + O + Adv |
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5. Prepositions (Prep):
Prepositions are little words that indicate direction, time, place, etc. They are followed by a noun.
Prep + N |
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Expanding on the Basics
Intermediate‑level students need to see how the patterns work in conjunction with each other. For example, in the Prep + N pattern, the noun can take an article (Art + N) and/or an adjective (Adj + N).
Example #1
Prep + N |
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Prep + Art + N |
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Prep + Art + Adj + N |
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Example #2
Adj + N |
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Art + Adj + N |
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Art + Adv + Adj + N |
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Example #3
V + Adv |
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V + Adv + V |
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V + Adv + Adv + V |
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Example #4
SVO |
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(Art + N) + V + (Art + N) |
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(Art + Adj + N) + (Adv + V) + (Art + Adj + N) |
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For higher‑level students, you can now show how complex sentences involve multiple clauses and phrases that are joined by conjunctions, transitional words (adverbs), punctuation, etc.