syntactic analysis - Sentences with no verb
In Spanish we've got something called "Oración unimembre" which refers to a sentence with only one kind of part (the one with the verb or the one with the subject). I don't know the way it is in English. I know you add subjects to things we don't, like the sentence "It is raining". For us the sky can't work as a subject who rains.
I was writing in English when I came to this sentence "System shutdown in 60 seconds" I didn't realize that something was missing. In fact, I continued typing till Word corrector told me I should change that.
I think the correct formulation may be "The system will shutdown in 60 seconds" or something with a verb in it. However, I don't get the grammar problem. I think you can get the meaning perfectly from the original.
My question: am I wrong? Am I missing something?
I've just saw the title of my question is also a kind of sentence like the ones I'm talking about and could be the answer to a question:
Children: What are we learning today?
Teacher: Sentences with no verb.
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