Synonym: depict, design, draw, portray, sketch. Similar words: diagnose, diagnosis, diagnoses, a grand, vagrant, grammar, epigram, program. Meaning: [‘daɪəgræm] n. a drawing intended to explain how something works; a drawing showing the relation between the parts. v. make a schematic or technical drawing of that shows how things work or how they are constructed.
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1. Draw a simple diagram of the leaf structure.
2. Do you have an installation diagram?
3. Like any such diagram, it is a simplification.
3. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
4. The lecturer illustrated his point with a diagram on the blackboard.
5. He is drawing a diagram, showing how the machine works.
6. The teacher drew a diagram showing how the blood flows through the heart.
7. This diagram will illustrate what I mean.
8. A diagram represents things in only two dimensions.
9. There’s a diagram on page 25.
10. This diagram fits well into the article.
11. The diagram is correct in every detail.
12. The engineer drew a diagram of the bridge.
13. There are explanatory notes with the diagram.
14. The results are shown in diagram 2.
15. On the back of the letter was a diagram.
16. The diagram had been copied with great precision.
17. This is represented in the schematic diagram below.
18. Is this diagram to scale ?
19. A family tree is a diagram with branches, showing how the members of a family are descended and related.
20. The diagram is meant to show the different stages of the process.
21. Compare this system to the one shown in diagram B.
22. You can plot all these numbers on one diagram for comparison.
23. The first diagram is a view of the shop from the street, and the second shows it in section.
24. I’d like you to look at the diagram which is halfway down page 27.
25. a diagram that schematizes the creation and consumption of wealth.
26. Label the diagram clearly.
27. All this information can be conveyed in a simple diagram.
28. The data can be represented graphically in a line diagram.
29. I can’t see the relationship between the figures and the diagram.
30. Join the points A and B together on the diagram with a straight line.
More similar words: diagnose, diagnosis, diagnoses, a grand, vagrant, grammar, epigram, program, fragrant, agrarian, programme, cablegram, programming, grammatically, conflagration, foliage, verbiage, agree, diary, media, india, cramp, frame, drama, chagrin, agree on, agree to, Indian, dialog, median.
Princeton’s WordNetRate this definition:2.3 / 4 votes
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diagramverb
a drawing intended to explain how something works; a drawing showing the relation between the parts
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diagram, plotverb
make a schematic or technical drawing of that shows interactions among variables or how something is constructed
WiktionaryRate this definition:3.8 / 4 votes
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diagramnoun
A plan, drawing, sketch or outline to show how something works, or show the relationships between the parts of a whole.
Electrical diagrams show device interconnections.
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diagramnoun
A graph or chart.
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diagramnoun
A functor from an index category to another category. The objects and morphisms of the index category need not have any internal substance, but rather merely outline the connective structure of at least some part of the diagram’s codomain. If the index category is J and the codomain is C, then the diagram is said to be «of type J in C».
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diagramverb
To represent or indicate something using a diagram.
Samuel Johnson’s DictionaryRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes
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Diagramnoun
A delineation of geometrical figures; a mathematical scheme.
Etymology: διάγϱαμμα.
Many a fair precept in poetry is like a seeming demonstration in the mathematicks; very specious in the diagram, but failing in the mechanick operation.
Dryden.Why do not these persons make a diagram of these cogitative lines and angles, and demonstrate their properties of perception and appetite, as plainly as we know the other properties of triangles and circles?
Richard Bentley, Sermons.
WikipediaRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes
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Diagram
A diagram is a symbolic representation of information using visualization techniques. Diagrams have been used since prehistoric times on walls of caves, but became more prevalent during the Enlightenment. Sometimes, the technique uses a three-dimensional visualization which is then projected onto a two-dimensional surface. The word graph is sometimes used as a synonym for diagram.
Webster DictionaryRate this definition:3.7 / 3 votes
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Diagramnoun
a figure or drawing made to illustrate a statement, or facilitate a demonstration; a plan
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Diagramnoun
any simple drawing made for mathematical or scientific purposes, or to assist a verbal explanation which refers to it; a mechanical drawing, as distinguished from an artistical one
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Diagramverb
to put into the form of a diagram
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Etymology: [Gr. , fr. to mark out by lines; dia` through + to draw, write: cf. F. diagramme. See Graphic.]
FreebaseRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes
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Diagram
A diagram is a two-dimensional geometric symbolic representation of information according to some visualization technique. Sometimes, the technique uses a three-dimensional visualization which is then projected onto the two-dimensional surface. The word graph is sometimes used as a synonym for diagram.
Chambers 20th Century DictionaryRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes
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Diagram
dī′a-gram, n. a figure or plan drawn in outline to illustrate any statement: a record traced by an automatic indicator.—adj. Diagrammat′ic.—adv. Diagrammat′ically.—n. Dī′agraph, an instrument for enabling unskilled persons to draw objects in outline.—adj. Diagraph′ic. [L.,—Gr. diagramma—dia, round, graphein, to write.]
British National Corpus
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Written Corpus Frequency
Rank popularity for the word ‘diagram’ in Written Corpus Frequency: #2884
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Nouns Frequency
Rank popularity for the word ‘diagram’ in Nouns Frequency: #2006
How to pronounce diagram?
How to say diagram in sign language?
Numerology
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Chaldean Numerology
The numerical value of diagram in Chaldean Numerology is: 7
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Pythagorean Numerology
The numerical value of diagram in Pythagorean Numerology is: 8
Examples of diagram in a Sentence
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Satya Nadella:
The Venn diagram is pretty big.
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David Makovsky:
We couldn’t create that diagram where they all overlapped on these five issues.
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Chester Wisniewski:
We have a collision of tech, privacy and health professionals and the Venn diagram doesn’t really have a spot where they all overlap.
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Microsoft Corp:
The professionals of the world can benefit in terms of getting their work done, the Venn diagram is pretty big.
Popularity rank by frequency of use
Translations for diagram
From our Multilingual Translation Dictionary
- رسم بياني, رسم ايضاحي, مخططArabic
- план, диаграма, скицаBulgarian
- diagramCzech
- DiagrammGerman
- διάγραμμαGreek
- diagramaSpanish
- شماPersian
- kaavioFinnish
- diagrammeFrench
- diagramaGalician
- diagrammaItalian
- グラフ, チャート, 図表, ダイヤグラム, 図Japanese
- hoahoaMāori
- rajahMalay
- diagramDutch
- diagramaPortuguese
- diagramăRomanian
- график, план, диаграмма, чертёж, схемаRussian
- diagramSwedish
Get even more translations for diagram »
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Are we missing a good definition for diagram? Don’t keep it to yourself…
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A diagram is a symbolic representation of information using visualization techniques. Diagrams have been used since prehistoric times on walls of caves, but became more prevalent during the Enlightenment.[1] Sometimes, the technique uses a three-dimensional visualization which is then projected onto a two-dimensional surface. The word graph is sometimes used as a synonym for diagram.
Overview[edit]
The term «diagram» in its commonly used sense can have a general or specific meaning:
- visual information device : Like the term «illustration», «diagram» is used as a collective term standing for the whole class of technical genres, including graphs, technical drawings and tables.
- specific kind of visual display : This is the genre that shows qualitative data with shapes that are connected by lines, arrows, or other visual links.
In science the term is used in both ways. For example, Anderson (1997) stated more generally: «diagrams are pictorial, yet abstract, representations of information, and maps, line graphs, bar charts, engineering blueprints, and architects’ sketches are all examples of diagrams, whereas photographs and video are not».[2] On the other hand, Lowe (1993) defined diagrams as specifically «abstract graphic portrayals of the subject matter they represent».[3]
In the specific sense diagrams and charts contrast with computer graphics, technical illustrations, infographics, maps, and technical drawings, by showing «abstract rather than literal representations of information».[4] The essence of a diagram can be seen as:[4]
- a form of visual formatting devices
- a display that does not show quantitative data (numerical data), but rather relationships and abstract information
- with building blocks such as geometrical shapes connected by lines, arrows, or other visual links.
Or in Hall’s (1996) words «diagrams are simplified figures, caricatures in a way, intended to convey essential meaning».[5] These simplified figures are often based on a set of rules. The basic shape according to White (1984) can be characterized in terms of «elegance, clarity, ease, pattern, simplicity, and validity».[4] Elegance is basically determined by whether or not the diagram is «the simplest and most fitting solution to a problem».[6]
Diagrammatology[edit]
Diagrammatology is the academic study of diagrams. Scholars note that while a diagram may look similar to the thing that it represents, this is not necessary. Rather a diagram may only have structural similarity to what it represents, an idea often attributed to Charles Sanders Peirce.[7]: 42 Structural similarity can be defined in terms of a mapping between parts of the diagram and parts of what the diagram represents and the properties of this mapping, such as maintaining relations between these parts and facts about these relations. This is related to the concept of isomorphism, or homomorphism in mathematics.[7]: 43
Sometimes certain geometric properties (such as which points are closer) of the diagram can be mapped to properties of the thing that a diagram represents. On the other hand the representation of an object in a diagram may be overly specific and properties that are true in the diagram may not be true for the object the diagram represents.[7]: 48 A diagram may act as a means of cognitive extension allowing reasoning to take place on the diagram based on which constraints are similar.[7]: 50
Gallery of diagram types[edit]
There are at least the following types of diagrams:
- Logical or conceptual diagrams, which take a collection of items and relationships between them, and express them by giving each item a 2D position, while the relationships are expressed as connections between the items or overlaps between the items, for example:
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- Quantitative diagrams, which display a relationship between two variables that take either discrete or a continuous range of values; for example:
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- Schematics and other types of diagrams, for example:
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Schematic diagram of the same.
Many of these types of diagrams are commonly generated using diagramming software such as Visio and Gliffy.
Diagrams may also be classified according to use or purpose, for example, explanatory and/or how to diagrams.
Thousands of diagram techniques exist. Some more examples follow:
Specific diagram types[edit]
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See also[edit]
Look up diagram in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- Chart
- Table (information)
- Diagrammatic reasoning
- Diagrammatology
- Experience model
- List of graphical methods
- Mathematical diagram
- Plot (graphics)
- commons:Specific diagram types – gallery of many diagram types.
- commons:Commons:Diagram resources
References[edit]
- ^ Eddy, Matthew Daniel (2021). «Diagrams». In Blair, Ann; Duguid, Paul; Goeing, Anja-Silvia; Grafton, Anthony (eds.). Information: A Historical Companion. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 397–401. ISBN 9780691179544. JSTOR j.ctv1pdrrbs.42. OCLC 1202730160.
- ^ Michael Anderson (1997). «Introduction to Diagrammatic Reasoning,» at cs.hartford.edu. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
- ^ Lowe, Richard K. (1993). «Diagrammatic information: techniques for exploring its mental representation and processing». Information Design Journal. 7 (1): 3–18. doi:10.1075/idj.7.1.01low.
- ^ a b c Brasseur, Lee E. (2003). Visualizing technical information: a cultural critique. Amityville, N.Y: Baywood Pub. ISBN 0-89503-240-6.
- ^ Bert S. Hall (1996). «The Didactic and the Elegant: Some Thoughts on Scientific and Technological Illustrations in the Middle Ages and Renaissance». in: B. Braigie (ed.) Picturing knowledge: historical and philosophical problems concerning the use of art in science. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p.9
- ^ White, Jan V. (1984). Using charts and graphs: 1000 ideas for visual persuasion. New York: Bowker. ISBN 0-8352-1894-5.
- ^ a b c d Studies in diagrammatology and diagram praxis. Olga Pombo, Alexander Gerner. London: College Publications. 2010. ISBN 978-1-84890-007-3. OCLC 648770148.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link)
Further reading[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to diagrams.
Wikiquote has quotations related to Diagram.
- Bounford, Trevor (2000). Digital diagrams. New York: Watson-Guptill Publications. ISBN 978-0-8230-1572-6.
- Michael Anderson, Peter Cheng, Volker Haarslev (Eds.) (2000). Theory and Application of Diagrams: First International Conference, Diagrams 2000. Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, September 1–3, 2000. Proceedings.
- Garcia, M. (ed.), (2012) The Diagrams of Architecture. Wiley. Chichester.
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- Sample Diagrams
- Parts of Speech
- Diagramming
- Video
- Q&A
- Tips
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Diagramming sentences might seem complicated at first, but you’ll quickly get the hang of it. Sentence diagramming enables you to visually understand the function of every part of a sentence, which helps you construct better sentences. Once you understand the essentials, diagramming a sentence can be like completing a Sudoku or a crossword puzzle.
Sample Diagrams
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1
Review the parts of speech. Understanding what nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, conjunctions, prepositions, etc. are is essential to sentence diagramming.[1]
- Nouns are words representing people, places, things, or ideas.
- Dog, computer, Haiti, teacher, and dream
- Pronouns are words like he, she, they, it, or who, which represent nouns.
- Verbs are action words.
- To run, to swim, and to fly
- Adjectives are description words that apply to nouns.
- Blue in blue water, big in big baby, and smelly in smelly garbage
- Adverbs, like adjectives, are description words; however, adverbs apply to verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs.
- Quickly in quickly run, quite in quite slowly, and very in very beautiful
- Participles are words formed from verbs that act like adjectives or nouns.[2]
- Working in working farmers, flying in flying birds, and flooded in flooded basement
- Conjunctions join clauses or words within the same clause.
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And, but, or, for, nor, so, and yet
- Joining independent clauses: «Jalissa took the car keys, and she drove to work.»
- Joining words in the same clause: «Arturo likes apples and oranges equally.»
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And, but, or, for, nor, so, and yet
- Prepositions tell you how nouns in a sentence relate to one another. There are many prepositions.
- Above, on, in, between, through, and to
- Articles modify nouns differently than adjectives. They help make nouns more specific.
- a, an, and the
- Nouns are words representing people, places, things, or ideas.
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2
Parse your sentence to find the different parts of speech. It is much easier to diagram a sentence if you already have an idea of the grammatical contents of that sentence. You can write out and label the different words in the sentence, or you can simply note mentally which words serve what purpose. Some words are difficult to parse, so save those for last.
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Determine your subject and verb. These are the foundations of a sentence, and thus the foundations of a sentence diagram. The subject is a noun or pronoun that is performing the verb. The verb is the action of the sentence. The subjects of the following sentences are bold, and the main verbs are italic.
- Children will listen.
- Though John doesn’t like broccoli, he will eat other vegetables.
- Vegetables disgust Felipe.
- Felipe was disgusted by vegetables.
- Ira gave Cho her necklace.
- Find the direct object if there is one. Direct objects are nouns or pronouns that are the recipients of the verb. From the above examples, Children will listen does not have a direct object; but, Vegetables disgust Felipe does. Felipe is the direct object of the verb disgust.
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Determine your subject and verb. These are the foundations of a sentence, and thus the foundations of a sentence diagram. The subject is a noun or pronoun that is performing the verb. The verb is the action of the sentence. The subjects of the following sentences are bold, and the main verbs are italic.
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1
Draw a horizontal line with a small vertical line through the middle. To the left of the vertical line, write your subject. To the right of the vertical line, write your verb. This is the most basic complete sentence.[3]
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2
Draw another vertical line stopping at the horizontal line if there is a direct object. To the right of this line, write the direct object.
- In the above sentence, Vegetables disgust Felipe, vegetables is the subject, disgust is the verb, and Felipe is the direct object.
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3
Place indirect objects beneath the verb. In general, indirect objects could take a preposition and so are drawn with a diagonal line coming off of the word they modify. See step 6 for prepositions.[4]
- In the above sentence, The farmers gave their kids fresh vegetables, farmers is the subject, gave is the verb, vegetables is the direct object, kids is the indirect object, the is an article, their is a possessive pronoun, and fresh is an adjective modifying vegetables.
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4
Draw a slash if there is a predicate nominative or predicate adjective. A predicate nominative is a noun, pronoun, or adjective that refers to the subject. The verb preceding the predicate nominative or adjective is usually a linking verb, such as the forms of to be (is, are, was, etc.) or sense words (looks, smells, tastes, etc.). To the right of the slash, write the predicate nominative or adjective.
- In the above sentence, Vegetables are disgusting, vegetables is the subject, are is a linking verb, and disgusting is the predicate adjective.
- Note that pronouns following linking verbs should be in the nominative case: This is she or It is I and not This is her or It is me.
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5
Place adjectives, adverbs, articles, and possessives on diagonal lines below the words they modify.
- In the above sentence, The green vegetables are always disgusting, vegetables is the subject, are is the linking verb, disgusting is the predicate adjective, green is an adjective modifying vegetables, the is an article, and always is an adverb modifying disgusting.
- Participles are diagrammed similarly to adjectives. Draw the participle as a curved word on a bent, slanted line beneath the word it modifies. In the above sentence, Working farmers enjoy vegetables, working is a participle modifying farmers, which is the subject; enjoy is the verb; and vegetables is the object.
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6
Begin prepositions like you would adjectives: Draw a diagonal line down. The object of the preposition goes on a horizontal line coming off the preposition line.
- In the above sentence, The kids threw the vegetables in the trash, kids is the subject, threw is the verb, vegetables is the direct object, in is a preposition, trash is the object of the preposition, and all three thes are articles.
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7
Determine how any conjunctions are being used.
- If the sentence is a compound sentence made up of two independent clauses, the coordinating conjunction will connect via a bent, broken line.[5]
- In the above sentence, The green vegetables are always disgusting, and I hate them, there are two independent clauses. Vegetables is the subject of the first clause, are is a linking verb, disgusting is the predicate adjective, the is an article, green is an adjective, and always is an adverb. I is the subject of the second clause, hate is the verb, and them is the direct object (it is a pronoun whose antecedent is vegetables). The two clauses are linked by the coordinating conjunction and.
- If the sentence is a simple sentence and the conjunction is joining words within it, you will split the line and join it by a broken line, or you will join two existing lines with a broken line.
- In the first of the above sentences, I like fruits and vegetables, I is the subject, like is the verb, fruits and vegetables are the two direct objects, and and is the conjunction joining the direct objects.
- In the second of the above sentences, Green and yellow vegetables are disgusting, vegetables is the subject, are is the linking verb, disgusting is the predicate adjective, always is an adverb modifying disgusting, green and yellow are adjectives modifying vegetables, and and is the conjunction joining the adjectives.
- If the sentence is a compound sentence made up of two independent clauses, the coordinating conjunction will connect via a bent, broken line.[5]
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8
Draw appositives in parentheses next to the words they modify. Appositives are words that redefine or rename other words. Appositives can be separated in sentences using colons, dashes, or parentheses and do not change the meaning of the sentence. Adjectives and articles that apply to the appositive are drawn beneath the appositive word.
- In the above sentence, An unabashed herbivore, I like fruits and vegetables, I is the subject, like is the verb, fruits and vegetables are direct objects, and joins the direct objects, herbivore is in apposition to I, an is an article, and unabashed is an adjective modifying herbivore.
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9
Place infinitive phrases on their own line, called a pedestal, beginning with a diagonal. Infinitives are the basic forms of verbs, often beginning with the word to, as in to see or to walk or to eat.[6]
- In the above sentence, I like to eat vegetables, I is the subject, like is the verb, to eat vegetables is an infinitive phrase made up of the verb to eat and the object vegetables.
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10
Draw a staircase for gerunds. Gerunds are verbs ending in -ing that act as nouns, but often take direct objects. They are usually drawn on a pedestal.[7]
- In the above sentence, Eating vegetables is good for you, eating vegetables is a gerund phrase made up of the gerund eating and the object vegetables, is is a linking verb, good is the predicate adjective, for is a preposition, and you is the object of the preposition.
- Gerunds can also function as objects of prepositions. When functioning as the object of a preposition, gerunds do not need a pedestal.
- In the above sentence, You can achieve a healthier lifestyle by eating vegetables, You is the subject, can achieve is a verb phrase, lifestyle is the direct object, by is a preposition, eating vegetables is a gerund phrase made up of the gerund eating and the object vegetables, healthier is an adjective modifying lifestyle, and a is an article. See Tips below for more information on verb phrases.
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11
Draw noun phrases on pedestals. That, and other expletives like which, can introduce a noun phrase.[8]
- In the above sentence, I wish that she ate more vegetables, I is the subject; wish is the verb; that she ate more vegetables is a noun clause introduced by the expletive that and made up of the subject she, the verb ate, the direct object vegetables, and the adjective more.
- Noun phrases do not always need an expletive. Sometimes it is simply understood, as in the sentence I wish she ate more vegetables. When the expletive is understood, draw an X in parentheses where the word would go.
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Question
How do you diagram «I am secretly correcting your work»?
Use the instructions in this article to try it yourself! Hint: «am correcting» is a verb phrase (see Tips) and «secretly» is an adverb modifying the verb phrase; and «your» is a possessive pronoun (see step 3 for an example of a possessive pronoun).
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Question
How do I diagram a sentence with the word «which» in it?
«Which» may be either an adjective or a pronoun depending on how it’s used. For example, in the sentence «I couldn’t decide which cat I like more.» which is a relative pronoun denoting a noun clause. In this sentence, «which cat I like more» is acting as a direct object. However, it functions as a clause. When used as a pronoun «which» is often seen in questions where it shows a lack of particular direction, and the predicate is what shows the asker asking for that direction. For example, in the sentence «Which is it?» which is acting as the subject itself. However, it doesn’t have to be in a question format, as seen in the phrase «which it is.»
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Question
How do you diagram multiple subjects?
See step 7 for conjunction examples. Each subject would get its own line and would be connected by verticle dashed lines, one of which probably has a conjunction written on it. It depends on the specific sentence, but these lines would then be joined to the remainder of the sentence.
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Video
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Split contractions when necessary.[9]
If the word is they’re, which stands for they are, the noun is they and the verb is are. If they is the subject, put it to the left of the vertical line, and place ‘re to the right of the vertical line. -
Words of direct address are written on their own lines above the subject. For example, in the sentence Chaequan, what would you like for dinner tonight?, Chaequan is a word of direct address, placed above the subject you. Would like is the verb, tonight is an adverb, dinner is the object of the preposition for, and what is the direct object.
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Beginning sentence diagramming can be confusing. Start with short, easy sentences, and build up from there. One of the best ways to learn to diagram sentences is to look at sentences that have already been diagrammed. There are many great resources on the web with hundreds of sentence diagrams, many of which have thorough explanations.
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Article SummaryX
To diagram a sentence, start by drawing a horizontal line with a vertical line through the middle. Next, put your subject to the left of the vertical line and the verb to the right. If the sentence contains a direct object, draw another vertical line that stops at the horizontal line. Then, add the direct object on the right-hand side. You can also place indirect objects beneath the verb. For adjectives and adverbs, put them on diagonal lines coming down from the words they modify. For tips on how to diagram prepositions and conjunctions, read on!
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Diagramming English Sentences: I have found that sentence diagramming is an effective way to learn grammar. Sentence diagramming will help you see the relationships between words, phrases and clauses in sentences. In fact, after learning sentence diagramming, you will begin to see how sentences work before you even diagram them.
However, you will need to have at least a rudimentary knowledge of the parts of speech and how they function in sentences: nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, etc. etc.
Diagramming sentences is a learning process. I started in fifth grade and I continued in university when I learned a second language.
1. Subject and Verb
The subject and the verb form the heart of a sentence. Though we rarely find a sentence consisting of only two words (subject and verb), the fact still remains that a group of words is not called a grammatically complete sentence if it does not contain these two parts.
The subject and verb are the initial building blocks for diagramming the English sentence. Everything else will expand and modify the subject-verb combinations.
Once you have found these subject-verb combinations, you will need to begin the diagramming process by drawing a line with subject on the left side and the verb on the right side. It is important that you separate subject and verb by drawing a vertical line. See image below!
Let’s diagram the following two sentences.
Rachel brought dad the weekly newspaper.
David is the minister of the Baptist Church.
Before I diagram an English sentence, I like to mark off the different parts of speech. There are several ways to do this. But I often do it like this.
Rachel (subject) brought (verb) dad (indirect object) the (definite article) weekly (adjective) newspaper (direct object).
David (subject) is (linking verb) the minister (predicate nominative) of the Baptist Church (adjective phrase).
2. Subject, Verb and Direct Object
3. Subject, Verb, Direct Object and Indirect Object
The “x” stands for “to” or “for.”
4. Subject, Linking Verb and Predicate Noun and Adjective
5. Adjectives and Adverbs
Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives or other adverbs.
6. Adjective and Adverb Phrases
Diagram adjective and adverb phrases under the words they modify.
The best way to learn diagramming English sentences is to start diagramming the subject-verb combinations and then expand with direct object or indirect object and the modifiers.
You will be surprise just how quick you will pick up diagramming by just doing it.
Yes, you will need some resources. There is a lot of free stuff on the internet. However, you can also purchase material that will fast track your experience of diagramming English sentences.
Diagramming English Sentences Resources
Sentence Diagramming Exercises: An Introduction to Sentence Diagramming by Elizabeth O’Brien
Sentence Diagramming Reference Manual: How To Diagram Anything by Elizabeth O’Brien