It is the subject and any modifiers
The base form of a noun without any modifiers is called the root or base noun.
Intervening modifiers are descriptors that surround the subject of a sentence. These words can be adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, verb phrases, and dependent clauses.
Intervening modifiers are descriptors that surround the subject of a sentence. These words can be adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, verb phrases, and dependent clauses.
The sentence with evaluative modifiers like "terrible," "horrible," "awful," or "disastrous" usually conveys strong disapproval. These modifiers express a negative judgment or opinion about the subject or action being described.
Ball is the subject. These and round are modifiers (adjectives).
žComplete predicates are all the other words besides the subject and its modifiers.
A subject can be compound or singular. If it is compound, then both are the subject. Example:John and Jeff rode their bikes.
Modifiers
compound subject
No, a sentence can only have one complete subject, which is the noun or pronoun that the sentence is about. Additional nouns or pronouns in the sentence would typically function as objects, complements, or modifiers rather than as complete subjects.
Well-known author High-quality products Two-year-old child Fast-paced environment