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  1. 7th Grade ELA
  2. Choosing Among Simple, Compound, Complex, and Compound-Complex Sentences

7TH GRADE ELA • LANGUAGE

Choosing Among Simple, Compound, Complex, and Compound-Complex Sentences

Master the four sentence types so you can show exactly how your ideas connect — and make your writing shine.

SECTION 1

Why Do Sentence Types Matter?

Have you ever read something that felt choppy and boring — just one short sentence after another? Or maybe you read a passage that went on and on with no breaks, and you totally lost track of the point? Writers have been wrestling with this problem for thousands of years. The solution they discovered is surprisingly simple: use different sentence structures to show how ideas relate to each other.

Let's take a quick trip through history to see how people figured this out.

~400 B.C.E.
Ancient Greece
The philosopher Aristotle studied how speakers connected ideas. He noticed that great speakers used a mix of short, punchy statements and longer, flowing sentences to keep audiences interested.
~100 C.E.
Roman Rhetoric
Roman teachers like Quintilian taught students to combine clauses (groups of words with a subject and a verb) in different ways. They called this compositio — literally, "putting together."
1700s
English Grammar Takes Shape
Scholars began writing the first English grammar books. They labeled sentences as "simple," "compound," and "complex" — the same categories you'll learn today.
1900s
Modern Linguistics
Linguists (scientists who study language) discovered that sentence variety isn't just a style choice. It actually helps readers understand relationships between ideas, like cause-and-effect or contrast.
Today
Your Writing
The Common Core standards ask you to choose among sentence types on purpose — not randomly — so your writing clearly signals how your ideas connect.

Here's the big question this lesson answers: How do you pick the right sentence type to show the exact relationship between your ideas? Let's find out.

SECTION 2

The Four Sentence Types

Before we can choose among sentence types, we need a quick vocabulary refresher. A clause is a group of words that has both a subject and a verb. There are two kinds of clauses you need to know.

An independent clause (IC) expresses a complete thought and can stand alone as a sentence. Example: The dog barked. A dependent clause (DC) starts with a special word — like because, although, when, if — and cannot stand alone. Example: Because the cat appeared. That phrase leaves you hanging — it's not a complete thought by itself.

Now, here are the four sentence types built from these two building blocks.

1

Simple Sentence

Formula: 1 independent clause. It expresses one complete idea. "The rain stopped." Simple doesn't mean short — it can have compound subjects or verbs — but it has just one IC.
2

Compound Sentence

Formula: 2+ independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so — remember FANBOYS) or a semicolon. "The rain stopped, and the sun came out."
3

Complex Sentence

Formula: 1 independent clause + 1 or more dependent clauses. A subordinating conjunction (because, although, when, if, since, while, etc.) introduces the DC. "When the rain stopped, we went outside."
4

Compound-Complex Sentence

Formula: 2+ independent clauses + 1 or more dependent clauses. "When the rain stopped, the sun came out, and we went outside." This type combines compound and complex features.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of sentences like LEGO bricks. An independent clause is a full, finished car that can roll on its own. A dependent clause is a cool spoiler or wing — it adds detail, but it needs to be snapped onto a car to work. A simple sentence is one car. A compound sentence is two cars linked together like a train. A complex sentence is one car with a spoiler attached. And a compound-complex sentence is a train of cars, at least one of which has a spoiler.
SECTION 3

Visual Map of the Four Types

The diagram below shows how the four sentence types are built from independent clauses (solid boxes) and dependent clauses (dashed boxes). Notice how each type adds another building block.

SIMPLEICThe rain stopped.COMPOUNDIC+ICThe rain stopped, and the sun came out.FANBOYSCOMPLEXDC+ICWhen the rain stopped, we went outside.subordinating conj.COMPOUND-COMPLEXDC+IC+ICWhen the rain stopped, the sun came out, and we went outside.IC = solidDC = dashed+ = joined by conjunction or semicolonMore clauses = more relationships you can show!
Diagram showing four sentence types as combinations of independent and dependent clauses

Look at the diagram carefully. Simple sentences stand alone with one solid box. Compound sentences link two solid boxes side by side — the ideas are equally important. Complex sentences attach a dashed box (a dependent clause) to a solid one — that tells the reader one idea depends on the other. Compound-complex sentences combine both techniques for the richest connections.

SECTION 4

How Each Type Signals a Relationship

Choosing a sentence type is not just about following grammar rules. It's about meaning. Each type sends a different signal to your reader about how your ideas relate. Let's break this down.

Simple → "Here is one clear fact."

A simple sentence puts one idea in the spotlight with no distractions. Use it when you want to make a point land hard or when an idea can stand on its own. Example: Recycling reduces waste. Short. Clear. Done.

Compound → "These ideas are equally important."

When you join two independent clauses with a FANBOYS conjunction, you tell the reader that both ideas carry equal weight. The conjunction itself shows the relationship: and = addition, but / yet = contrast, so = cause-and-effect, or = choice. Example: Recycling reduces waste, and it saves energy.

Complex → "One idea depends on the other."

A subordinating conjunction (because, although, when, if, since, unless, while, after, before) turns a clause into a dependent clause — it "depends" on the main clause for its full meaning. This creates a clear hierarchy: the independent clause is the main idea, and the dependent clause provides a condition, reason, time, or contrast. Example: Because recycling reduces waste, many cities require it.

Compound-Complex → "Multiple ideas with layered relationships."

This type lets you show two equally important ideas and make one of them depend on a condition or reason. It's perfect for expressing nuanced thinking. Example: Although recycling takes effort, it reduces waste, and it saves energy. Here, the dependent clause adds a concession (a "yes, but" feeling), while the two independent clauses share equal importance.

How many ideas?Just ONE idea→ SIMPLETWO or more ideasDoes one idea DEPENDon the other?NO→ COMPOUNDYESAre there also TWO equalideas linked together?NO→ COMPLEXYES→ COMPOUND-COMPLEX
Flowchart: choosing a sentence type based on the relationship between ideas

Use this flowchart when you're writing. Ask yourself: How many ideas am I combining? Does one depend on the other? Your answers lead you to the right sentence type every time.

SECTION 5

Detailed Breakdown: Conjunctions and Signals

The words you use to connect clauses are just as important as the sentence structure itself. Here is a reference chart showing the most common connecting words and what they signal to your reader.

Connection TypeWords / PunctuationRelationship SignaledExample
Coordinating (FANBOYS)andAddition — both ideas matter equallyI studied hard, and I passed the test.
but, yetContrast — the ideas disagreeI studied hard, but the test was still tough.
soResult — one idea causes the otherI studied hard, so I felt confident.
or, norChoice — one or the otherStudy tonight, or wake up early.
Subordinatingbecause, sinceCause / ReasonBecause I studied, I passed.
although, even thoughConcession / ContrastAlthough it rained, we played.
when, while, after, beforeTimeWhen the bell rings, class ends.
if, unlessConditionIf you practice, you'll improve.
Semicolon ; Close connection — the ideas are relatedI studied all night; the test was easy.

Notice how each connecting word gives your reader a mini road sign. "Because" says, "Here comes the reason." "Although" says, "Surprise — this goes against what you'd expect." "And" says, "Here's another equally important fact." When you choose a sentence type, you're really choosing which road signs to put up for your reader.

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Imagine you're giving someone directions. A simple sentence is like saying "Turn left." A compound sentence is "Turn left, and then go straight." A complex sentence is "When you see the gas station, turn left." A compound-complex sentence is "When you see the gas station, turn left, and then go straight." Each version gives different amounts of information and shows how the steps relate. The more relationships you need to show, the more complex your sentence should be.
SECTION 6

Worked Example: Revising a Paragraph

Let's see sentence-type choices in action. Below is a paragraph made up of only simple sentences. We'll revise it step by step, choosing among the four types to signal relationships between ideas more clearly.

⚠ Original (all simple sentences)
The Amazon rainforest is huge. It covers about 2.1 million square miles. Scientists call it the "lungs of the Earth." The rainforest produces about 20% of the world's oxygen. Deforestation is a serious problem. Farmers clear the land for crops. We need to find solutions.

Revising with Sentence Variety

Step 1 — Combine with addition (compound)

The first two sentences share the same topic: the size of the Amazon. We can link them with "and" since both facts carry equal weight.
The Amazon rainforest is huge, and it covers about 2.1 million square miles.

Step 2 — Show reason (complex)

Why do scientists call it the "lungs of the Earth"? Because it produces 20% of the world's oxygen. That's a cause-and-reason relationship — perfect for a complex sentence.
Scientists call it the "lungs of the Earth" because the rainforest produces about 20% of the world's oxygen.

Step 3 — Show contrast + result (compound-complex)

The rainforest is vital, yet deforestation threatens it. This involves a concession ("although the forest is vital") plus a contrast and result. A compound-complex sentence handles all three.
Although the rainforest is vital, deforestation remains a serious problem because farmers clear the land for crops, so we need to find solutions.

Final Revised Paragraph

The Amazon rainforest is huge, and it covers about 2.1 million square miles. Scientists call it the "lungs of the Earth" because the rainforest produces about 20% of the world's oxygen. Although the rainforest is vital, deforestation remains a serious problem because farmers clear the land for crops, so we need to find solutions. See how much smoother and more connected the ideas feel? We used three different sentence types — compound, complex, and compound-complex — to clearly show addition, reason, concession, and result.
SECTION 7

Strengths and Limitations

No single sentence type is "the best." Each has strengths and limitations. Great writers mix all four types. Here's a quick comparison.

TypeStrengthsLimitations
SimpleClear, punchy, easy to follow. Great for emphasis and topic sentences.Too many in a row sounds choppy and repetitive. Can't show how ideas relate.
CompoundShows two ideas are equally important. Easy to read. Good for addition and contrast.Overuse creates a "this and this and this" pattern. Can't show that one idea depends on the other.
ComplexShows cause, time, condition, or concession. Tells the reader which idea is the main one.Putting the dependent clause in the wrong spot can confuse readers. Can't combine two equal main ideas.
Compound-ComplexHandles the richest, most layered relationships. Shows sophistication.Can get long and tangled. Hard to punctuate correctly. Use sparingly.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of your writing like music. If every note were the same length, the song would be boring. A great song mixes short notes and long notes, pauses and bursts. In the same way, a great paragraph mixes simple sentences (short notes) with compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences (longer, flowing phrases). The variety is what makes it engaging — and the choice of type is what communicates meaning.
SECTION 8

Looking Ahead: Sentence Variety in Advanced Writing

Right now, you're learning to identify and choose among four sentence types. But as you move into 8th grade and high school, you'll take this even further. Here's a preview of what's coming.

What You're Learning Now (7th Grade)What's Next (8th–10th Grade)
Identify simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentencesUse sentence types strategically for rhetorical effect (persuasion, emphasis, pacing)
Use FANBOYS and subordinating conjunctionsAdd conjunctive adverbs (however, therefore, meanwhile) and semicolons for more nuanced connections
Combine two or three clausesUse parallel structure, appositives, and participial phrases to pack even more information into sentences
Vary sentence length in a paragraphAnalyze how professional authors vary sentences in published essays, speeches, and fiction

The skills you're building right now — recognizing clauses, understanding how conjunctions signal relationships, and choosing the right sentence type — are the foundation for all of that advanced work. Every great essayist, novelist, and speechwriter uses these exact building blocks.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

Try these five problems to test your understanding. Each one gets a little trickier. Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check your work.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
What is the difference between an independent clause and a dependent clause? Give one example of each.
PROBLEM 2 — IDENTIFICATION
Identify the sentence type of each sentence below: (a) Maria finished her homework early. (b) Maria finished her homework early, so she went to the park. (c) After Maria finished her homework, she went to the park.
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Combine these two simple sentences into a complex sentence that shows a cause-and-effect relationship. Choose the best subordinating conjunction. The river flooded. Heavy rains fell for three days.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Read this short paragraph. It uses only simple sentences. Rewrite it using at least three different sentence types to signal how the ideas relate. Our school held a bake sale. Students baked cookies and brownies. The goal was to raise money for new library books. We raised over $300. Everyone was proud.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
A classmate writes: "Although we studied hard, and we stayed up late, the test was easy." They call this a compound-complex sentence. Do you agree? Explain your reasoning, and if you disagree, fix the sentence so it truly is compound-complex.
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

Every sentence you write is built from independent clauses (complete thoughts that can stand alone) and dependent clauses (incomplete thoughts that start with subordinating conjunctions like because, when, although, and if). A simple sentence contains just one independent clause and delivers a single, clear idea. A compound sentence joins two or more independent clauses with coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) or a semicolon, signaling that the ideas carry equal weight. A complex sentence pairs an independent clause with one or more dependent clauses, showing that one idea depends on the other — through cause, time, condition, or contrast. A compound-complex sentence blends both techniques, using at least two independent clauses and at least one dependent clause to express layered, nuanced relationships.

The sentence type you choose is never random. It's a deliberate signal to your reader: "Here's how these ideas connect." By mixing all four types in your writing, you create variety that keeps readers engaged and clarity that helps them follow your thinking. Remember the golden rule: match the sentence structure to the relationship between your ideas, and your writing will always communicate exactly what you mean.

Varsity Tutors • 7th Grade English Language Arts (Common Core) • Sentence Types & Relationships