It, because is is a verb
Valentine's Day is the subject of that sentence.
The complete subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Marcus".
Valentine's Day is the subject of that sentence.
what is the complete subject in this sentence? The longest, most boring day of his life ended with a dull thud.
A complete sentence typically includes a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is being done to the subject). It must also express a complete thought. An example would be: "The cat (subject) sat on the mat (predicate)."
No, the sentence is missing a subject. A correct version would be: "My phone hasn't rung all day."
A compound sentence contains two independent clauses joined by a conjunction (and, but, or) or a coordinator (for, nor, yet, so)An independent clause is also known as a complete sentence. It contains a subject and a verb. It expresses a complete thought.Examples of compound sentences are highlighted below:It was a cold day and it snowed until noon.Note: "It was a cold day." is a complete sentence that could stand on its own."It snowed until noon." is also a complete sentence that could stand on its own.Tomorrow is Monday but I don't have to work.Please leave now or you will be late.She has a broken leg yet, she gets around well.The sun came out, so we went swimming.
The subject in this sentence is "today," and the verb is "is".
The simple subject in the sentence is "Valentine's Day."
She felt a sense of complete immersion in the novel, losing track of time as she became engrossed in the story.
No. There is no verb.
Yes, it is.