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AFPSAT Verbal AbilitySentence Structure & PhrasesCheat Sheet

Cheat sheet for AFPSAT Verbal Ability — Sentence Structure & Phrases. Compact, printable, and organised around the concepts Armed Forces of the Philippines tests most frequently in the AFPSAT 2026. Perfect for the week before exam day.

Exam context

On the AFPSAT 2026, the Verbal Ability subtest carries a "Core" weight in Armed Forces of the Philippines's pattern. Sentence Structure & Phrases lands at position 2nd out of 7 in the standard review order. Target score is AFP-set percentile, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Verbal Ability on a typical AFPSAT paper.

Sentence Structure & Phrases - Cheat sheet

Your last-minute revision companion for Sentence Structure & Phrases. Master the essential grammar rules and common errors tested in CSE Professional exams.

Sections

Formulas

Formula

Complete Sentence = Subject + Predicate

Meaning

Subject (noun/pronoun doing action) + Predicate (verb phrase telling about subject)

Watch Out

Don't confuse prepositional phrase objects with true subjects

When To Use

To identify if a group of words forms a complete sentence

Section Title

Basic Sentence Elements

Important Facts

  • Subject can be: noun, pronoun, noun phrase, gerund, infinitive, or noun clause
  • Prepositional phrases NEVER contain the subject of a sentence
  • Cross out prepositional phrases to find the true subject easily
  • In inverted sentences, subject comes after the verb

Key Definitions

Term

Subject

Example

Joy laughs out loud (Joy = subject)

Definition

The noun/pronoun that performs the action or is described in the sentence

Term

Simple Subject

Example

My kind American friend visited (friend = simple subject)

Definition

The main noun/pronoun without any modifiers

Term

Complete Subject

Example

My kind American friend visited (My kind American friend = complete subject)

Definition

The subject plus all its modifiers and descriptors

Term

Compound Subject

Example

Joy and Mark sing (Joy and Mark = compound subject)

Definition

Two or more simple subjects joined by conjunctions

Diagrams To Know

  • Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) sentence pattern
  • Complete vs Simple vs Compound subject identification

Section Title

Sentence Types & Structure

Important Facts

  • Independent clause = can stand alone as complete sentence
  • Dependent clause = cannot stand alone, needs main clause
  • Use comma after dependent clause when it starts the sentence
  • Coordinating conjunctions: FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So)

Key Definitions

Term

Simple Sentence

Example

Melissa loves to swim

Definition

One independent clause with subject and verb expressing complete thought

Term

Compound Sentence

Example

Celine has work, but she chose to sleep

Definition

Two independent clauses joined by conjunction or semicolon

Term

Complex Sentence

Example

Although he finished, Henry needs to work

Definition

One independent clause + at least one dependent clause

Term

Compound-Complex Sentence

Example

Abby finished thesis, but she failed defense even if she practiced

Definition

Two+ independent clauses + at least one dependent clause

Diagrams To Know

  • Four sentence types classification chart
  • Independent vs dependent clause identification

Section Title

Common Sentence Errors

Important Facts

  • Fix run-ons: use period, semicolon, comma+conjunction, or subordination
  • Fix fragments: add missing subject or predicate
  • Place modifiers next to words they modify
  • Ensure modifier has a clear target word in sentence

Key Definitions

Term

Run-on Sentence

Example

Wrong: I looked everywhere, I couldn't find my phone

Definition

Two independent clauses incorrectly joined by comma only

Term

Sentence Fragment

Example

Wrong: Andy studied hard. Passed all tests.

Definition

Incomplete sentence missing subject or predicate

Term

Dangling Modifier

Example

Wrong: Walking along highway, a cow passed by

Definition

Modifier with no clear word to modify in the sentence

Term

Misplaced Modifier

Example

Wrong: Elijah cut himself while shaving badly

Definition

Modifier placed too far from the word it modifies

Diagrams To Know

  • Run-on sentence correction methods flowchart
  • Modifier placement rules diagram

Section Title

Phrases

Important Facts

  • Prepositional phrases never contain sentence subjects
  • Cross out prep phrases to find true subject for subject-verb agreement
  • Adjectival phrases start with prepositions, adjective phrases contain adjectives
  • Noun phrases can function as subjects, objects, or complements

Key Definitions

Term

Prepositional Phrase

Example

in the house, for my friend, during the meeting

Definition

Preposition + object (noun/pronoun) providing additional information

Term

Noun Phrase

Example

the newly elected board chairman

Definition

Noun + all its modifiers and determiners

Term

Adjective Phrase

Example

extremely brown eyes, very expensive shoes

Definition

Group of words with adjective as head word modifying noun

Term

Adverbial Phrase

Example

in an hour (time), very quickly (manner)

Definition

Group of words functioning as adverb (time, place, manner, reason)

Diagrams To Know

  • Types of phrases classification chart
  • Phrase functions in sentences diagram

Formulas

Formula

Subject + Prepositional Phrase + Verb = Verb agrees with Subject (not phrase object)

Meaning

Ignore words in prepositional phrases when determining verb form

Watch Out

Don't let plural objects in prep phrases trick you into using plural verbs

When To Use

When prepositional phrase separates subject and verb

Section Title

Subject-Verb Agreement with Phrases

Important Facts

  • Each of the samples WAS (not were) - 'each' is singular
  • The percentage of responses increases (not increase) - 'percentage' is singular
  • Cross out prepositional phrases to see true subject-verb relationship
  • Some/any/none/all/most - agreement depends on object of preposition

Key Definitions

Term

Intervening Phrase

Example

The evaluation of the results reveals (not reveal)

Definition

Phrase that separates subject from verb, causing agreement confusion

Diagrams To Know

  • Subject-verb agreement decision tree with intervening phrases

Must Remember

  • Cross out prepositional phrases to find true subject for verb agreement
  • Run-on: two independent clauses joined by comma only (WRONG)
  • Fragment: incomplete sentence missing subject or predicate
  • Simple sentence = 1 independent clause; Compound = 2+ independent clauses
  • Complex sentence = 1 independent + 1+ dependent clause
  • Place modifiers next to words they modify to avoid confusion
  • Coordinating conjunctions: FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So)
  • Each/Every + prepositional phrase takes SINGULAR verb
  • Dependent clause cannot stand alone as sentence
  • Subject can be: noun, pronoun, gerund, infinitive, or noun clause

Last Minute Tips

  • If you see a comma between two complete thoughts, it's probably a run-on error
  • Cross out all prepositional phrases first - they're distractors in agreement questions
  • Look for sentence fragments by checking: Does this express a complete thought?
  • In modifier questions, ask: What word is being described? Place modifier near that word
  • Count independent clauses to classify sentence type quickly

Comparison Tables

Rows

Values

  • 1 independent clause
  • Joy sings
  • Period at end

Property

Simple

Values

  • 2+ independent clauses
  • Joy sings, but Mark dances
  • Comma + conjunction OR semicolon

Property

Compound

Values

  • 1 independent + 1+ dependent
  • Although tired, Joy sings
  • Comma after initial dependent clause

Property

Complex

Values

  • 2+ independent + 1+ dependent
  • Joy sings while tired, but Mark rests
  • Multiple punctuation rules apply

Property

Compound-Complex

Columns

  • Type
  • Structure
  • Example
  • Punctuation Rule

Table Title

Sentence Types Comparison

Rows

Values

  • Preposition + object
  • Modifies nouns/verbs
  • in the morning

Property

Prepositional

Values

  • Noun + modifiers
  • Acts as noun
  • the red car

Property

Noun

Values

  • Adjective + modifiers
  • Modifies nouns
  • very beautiful

Property

Adjective

Values

  • Functions as adverb
  • Modifies verbs/adjectives
  • quite slowly

Property

Adverbial

Columns

  • Phrase Type
  • Structure
  • Function
  • Example

Table Title

Common Phrase Types

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