How do you diagram the following sentence: Who bravely dares must soemtimes risk a fall.
hey why not draw a brave looking man (like with there hand on his hips or sumthing)at the edge of a cliff?
monii
To diagram the sentence "Who bravely dares must sometimes risk a fall," we can break it down into its different parts of speech and their relationships.
1. Start with the main subject: "Who bravely dares." In this case, "who" is a relative pronoun functioning as the subject. "Dares" is the main verb. The subject and verb form the core of the sentence.
2. Add the subject complement: "Must sometimes risk a fall." "Must" is an auxiliary verb indicating necessity. "Risk" is the main verb. "Sometimes" is an adverb modifying "risk." "A fall" is a noun phrase serving as the direct object of "risk."
Now, let's put it all together in a simple diagram:
(Who)
↓
┌────────────── (bravely) ───────┐
↓ ↓
(dares) ─────────► (must) ───────► (risk) ───────► (fall)
↑
↓
(sometimes)
Note: The arrows indicate the relationships between the different parts of speech. The subject is represented at the top, followed by the verbs, auxiliary verb, and other related words or phrases.