Getting Started

Subjects & Verbs

Every sentence has exactly two essential parts: a subject β€” who or what the sentence is about β€” and a verb (predicate) β€” what the subject does or is. Reed-Kellogg diagrams always begin here.

The Baseline

Every diagram is built on a horizontal base line. The subject sits on the left; the verb sits on the right. A full vertical line (passing through the base line) separates the two.

β€œChildren play.”

Childrenplay
Step 1 β€” simple subject and verb in present tense

The noun Children is the subject; the verb play is in the present tense.

Verb Tenses & Voices

All finite verbs β€” regardless of tense, voice, or mood β€” occupy the right side of the baseline. Multi-word verb phrases (auxiliaries + main verb) are written as a single unit on that same line.

β€œThey were selling.”

Theywere selling
Step 2 β€” personal pronoun subject, past progressive verb

The personal pronoun They is the subject. were selling is the past progressive β€” both words occupy the verb slot together.

β€œIt had been played.”

Ithad been played
Step 3 β€” pronoun subject, past-perfect passive

β€œSandwiches are being sold.”

Sandwichesare being sold
Step 4 β€” noun subject, present progressive passive

β€œHave you been playing?”

youHave been playing
Step 5 β€” interrogative sentence; you is always the subject

Key Concepts

Subject
The noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that the sentence is about. It governs the number of the verb. Personal pronouns in subject position use their nominative forms: I, you, he, she, it, we, they.
Predicate (Verb)
Everything in the sentence beyond the subject and its modifiers. In these early diagrams this is just the main verb (or verb phrase). Later you will add direct objects, predicate adjectives, and much more.
Finite verb
A verb that is inflected for tense and can serve as the main verb of a clause. Contrast with infinitives, gerunds, and participles, which are non-finite verbals.

Full Analysis: β€œThe cat sat on the mat.”

Here is a complete analysis of a simple sentence, showing the picture, editorial comment, and all three diagram views. The Reed-Kellogg and dependency tree can also be used interactively to practice labeling.

Example sentence

β€œThe cat sat on the mat.”

Picture

No image available

Comment

A classic simple declarative sentence. The subject is the noun phrase "the cat" and the predicate is the verb phrase "sat on the mat", where "on the mat" is a prepositional phrase functioning as an adverbial modifier.

Reed-Kellogg diagram

Read-onlyAnnotated
The catsatonmattheNP / nsubjVBD / ROOT

Dependency tree

Read-onlyAnnotated
nsubjdetpreppobjdetThecatsatonthemat.DETNOUNVERBADPDETNOUN

Dependency flat graph

Read-only
ROOTnsubjdetpreppobjdetThecatsatonthemat.