1. Use pronouns:
After a noun is mentioned above, it can be replaced by a pronoun to make the sentence more concise. Xiaoming likes eating apples. He eats it every day. The "he" here is a reference sentence, which replaces the "Xiao Ming" mentioned above.
2. Duplicate keywords:
After a keyword is mentioned in the previous article, it can reappear in the later article to attract readers' attention and strengthen understanding. I went to the library yesterday. There are many books in the library. The "library" here is a reference sentence, which repeats the place mentioned in the last article.
3. Use conjunctions:
The use of conjunctions can guide readers to understand the relationship before and after sentences. He is not only a good teacher, but also a good friend. The "he" here is a reference sentence, connecting the two sentences before and after.
4. Understanding through the context:
Sometimes anaphora sentences are not clear words, but are understood through context. I went to the supermarket to buy some food yesterday. When I got home, I found that I didn't buy a bag of food. "A bag of food" here is a reference sentence, which can be understood from the context as referring to the food mentioned above.
Introduction to sentences:
Sentence is the basic unit of language use, which consists of words and phrases (phrases) and can express a complete meaning, such as telling someone something, asking a question, asking or stopping, expressing some emotion, and indicating the continuation or omission of a paragraph. There is a big pause between sentences. It should end with a period, question mark, ellipsis or exclamation point.
In order to express the meaning clearly, commonly used sentences include two parts: one part is "who" or "what" said in the sentence; The other part is "what", "how" or "what to do" (predicate part) in the sentence.
Classification:
Sentence category. The mood category of a sentence is the category division of a sentence according to its mood. Including declarative sentences, interrogative sentences, imperative sentences and exclamatory sentences. The structural category of sentence patterns is to divide the categories of sentences according to their structural characteristics. Including simple sentences and complex sentences, but also can be divided into several small categories.
A sentence can belong to different categories from different angles or standards, such as "Do you watch movies?" It's a question, a simple sentence, a subject-predicate sentence and a verb-predicate sentence. "It's raining." It is a declarative sentence, a simple sentence and a verbal non-subject-predicate sentence.