Y06W15GR Sentence openings for focus (fronting starters)
Sentence Openings for Focus (Fronting Starters)
Most sentences begin with the subject — the person or thing doing the action. Changing where a sentence starts, by moving a time phrase, place phrase, or reason to the front, shifts the reader's focus. This technique is called fronting, and it gives a writer deliberate control over what the reader notices first.
- What a fronted starter is and how moving a phrase to the front of a sentence changes focus
- Which types of phrases can be used as fronted starters
- When a comma is needed after a fronted starter and why
- Sentence opener — the first word or phrase of a sentence; changing the opener changes what the reader pays attention to first
- Fronted starter — a phrase moved to the beginning of a sentence, before the subject; it signals time, place, manner, or reason before the main action is introduced
- Fronted adverbial — the most common type of fronted starter; an adverb or adverbial phrase placed at the front to tell the reader when, where, how, or why; for example, After reading the feedback, she rewrote the opening
- Starter comma — the comma placed after a fronted starter when the starter is a phrase (two or more words); it separates the opener from the subject and main clause that follow
- Focus — the idea the reader notices and processes first; placing a phrase at the front of a sentence highlights it more than leaving it at the end
How it works
1Time starters
Time starters tell the reader when the main action happens. Moving a time phrase to the front signals that timing is the most important thing for the reader to notice.
- Time phrases such as after, before, during, by the time, and the following day can all be moved to the front of a sentence; for example, The following day, she tried the new approach in her writing
- Comma rule — a comma is needed after a time phrase of two or more words at the front of a sentence; for example, After the lesson, uses a comma before the subject she
- Contrast with no comma — a single-word time opener such as Today or Yesterday does not always require a comma, though one is acceptable; the comma becomes essential once the opener is a longer phrase
2Place and reason starters
Place phrases and reason phrases can also be fronted to focus the reader on where or why something happened before introducing who did it.
- Place starters begin with prepositions such as in, at, on, across, and beside; for example, At the back of her notebook, she kept a list of feedback to act on
- Reason starters often begin with because of, due to, or as a result of and front the cause before the main action; for example, Because of the clear feedback, he knew exactly what to improve
- Starter comma — the same rule applies: use a comma after any fronted phrase of two or more words before the subject
3Choosing the best opener for the purpose
Fronting is a deliberate choice, not just a stylistic trick. The best opener is the one that matches what the writer wants the reader to focus on first.
- Matching focus to purpose — if the reason for a change matters most, front the reason; for example, To avoid the same mistake, she read the feedback twice puts the purpose at the front where the reader sees it first
- Avoiding overuse — fronting every sentence removes the effect; vary sentence openings so that fronted starters stand out when used deliberately
- Checking the comma — after writing a fronted phrase, count the words in the opener; if it is two or more words, add a comma before the subject to keep the sentence clear
See it in action
Fronting a time phrase to shift focus
She rewrote the opening paragraph the following day.
The following day, she rewrote the opening paragraph.
Moving the time phrase to the front signals that the timing matters and adds a comma after the opener.
Fronting a place phrase to add clarity
He kept a list of feedback to act on at the back of his notebook.
At the back of his notebook, he kept a list of feedback to act on.
The place phrase at the front removes the awkward ending and signals the location before introducing the action.
Fronting a reason phrase to guide the reader
She knew exactly what to improve because of the clear feedback.
Because of the clear feedback, she knew exactly what to improve.
The reason comes first, which tells the reader why before telling them what happened.
- A fronted starter is a phrase moved to the beginning of a sentence, before the subject, to shift the reader's focus
- Time, place, and reason phrases are the most common types of fronted starters
- A starter comma is needed after any fronted phrase of two or more words, placed between the opener and the subject
- Fronting is a deliberate choice — use it when the time, place, or reason deserves to be noticed first
- Avoid overuse — varying sentence openings makes each fronted starter more effective when it appears
- fronted starter(n.) a phrase moved to the beginning of a sentence before the subject, used to direct the reader's focus, as in After the lesson, she tried again
- fronted adverbial(n.) a specific type of fronted starter that tells the reader when, where, how, or why before introducing the main action, as in Because of the feedback, he made one careful change
- starter comma(n.) the comma placed after a fronted phrase of two or more words, separating the opener from the subject and main clause that follow
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