Yes, certainly. 'Today is the first day of the rest of your life.'
No, "today" cannot be the subject of a sentence by itself as it is an adverb indicating time. It can be part of a subject phrase, such as "Today is a good day."
Yes like... Today is a beautiful day
Yes, the sentence "Today has been the hottest day of the year" has both a subject ("today") and a verb ("has been"). The subject "today" is performing the action of "has been" in the sentence.
No, there is no preposition in the sentence "Today I had a pizza party."
The subject in the sentence is "you."
The subject of the sentence is "you."
Yes, "you" can be the subject in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "You are my friend," "you" is the subject.
The subject in this sentence is "today," and the verb is "is".
Yes, the word it can be the subject of a sentence. It is hot outside today. It hasn't rained this hard in ten years!
No, it is not a correct sentence. The pronouns 'her' and 'him' are objective pronouns, used for the object of a verb or a preposition. Your sentence has her and him as the subject of the verb 'have'. The corresponding subject pronouns are 'she' and 'he'. Corrected sentence: Did she and he have a disagreement today? However, when using the names of the people for a compound subject, both names are used, for example 'Jane and John". But when pronouns are used, the two people are usually referred to in the plural as 'they'. Better sentence: Did they have a disagreement today?
yes it is. the subject is the weather, and the verb is was.
Our subject today is "Native America Customs". The subject of the police investigation had a solid alibi.
Safety is of utmost importance in manufacturing companies. Safety was the subject of today's lecture.
I'm going to the movie today.
"it" is the subject. Controlling the verb "is".
The noun in the sentence is students. The subject 'all' is an indefinite pronoun; the words 'here' and 'today' are adverbs modifying the verb 'are'.
Yes, the sentence "Today has been the hottest day of the year" has both a subject ("today") and a verb ("has been"). The subject "today" is performing the action of "has been" in the sentence.
yes movies is the simple subject
It can be, it could also be the object of a sentence it just depends on how the sentences is written. subject -- The heat is stifling today. object -- I can't stand this stifling heat