Ambiguous
Ambiguous.
You can have more than one simple subject in a sentence
The subject in this sentence is not stated it is implied. It is you.(Can) you get more popcorn please?
The verb in the sentence "There are more cookies in the kitchen" is "are." In this sentence, "are" is a linking verb that connects the subject "there" to the subject complement "more cookies." Linking verbs do not show action but instead link the subject to more information about the subject.
The grammatically correct way to phrase this too-vague question is, "Can you give me more sentences with the words, already?" Note the pluralization of "sentence" and the additional comma.
The subject of the sentence "Get me more popcorn, please" is implied to be "you," as it is an imperative sentence. In this context, the speaker is giving a command to the listener to get more popcorn. The subject is not explicitly stated but is understood to be the person being addressed.
A subject pronoun is a pronoun that is used as the subject of a sentence. It replaces a noun that is the subject of the sentence to avoid repetition and make the sentence flow more smoothly. Examples of subject pronouns include "I," "you," "he," "she," "it," "we," and "they."
"That desciption is too vague, you need to be more specific."my quiz was vague because of my hand writing
Please don't interpret this the wrong way...
A compound subject is where there is more than one subject to a sentence.The best way to define this is through an example. In the sentence "Tom and Jerry ran," both Tom AND Jerry are the subject of the sentence. Since there are two subjects, this sentence has a compound subject.
yes
The subject. Or the acussative...But that is more of a description of the case of the word.