A subject, a verb, and a period at the end
Yes, it is, 'the end' is a sentence just like 'happy birthday', you may always f there are no subject and predicate in that little phrase but it's a sentence!
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
No, it is a proper sentence. The subject is 'You', the verb is 'overflowed', and 'it' is the object of the sentence. All it needs is a period at the end.
The subject in the sentnce is
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
If you reword the sentence, it will make things easier. In English, most sentences have the structure of SVO (subject, verb, object), with prepositional phrases at the beginning or end of the sentence, or after the subject or object. This sentence has the structure of VS (verb, subject) (there is no object) with the prepositional phrase at the beginning. "On the sand" is the prepositional phrase. We will put this at the end of the sentence. To order this sentence correctly, we must switch the subject and the verb (VS to SV). Now the sentence reads, "A beautiful seashell lay on the sand." "Seashell" is the subject. Note: "Beautiful" is not part of the subject, it is only an adjective modifying the subject.
"Thank you." is considered a sentence in itself with the subject being the understood pronoun "I."
The pronoun in the sentence is he, the subjective case functioning as the subject of the sentence.
Yes, you can end a sentence with the word "was" if it is part of a past tense verb or a relative clause. For example, "He told me he was going to the store, and that's where he was."
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
You need 1 capital letter 2 proper sentence structure ( subject noun, verb) 3 end mark