Ever is not a verb. It's an adverb.
the subject is problem and the verb is answer
The predicate is the part of the sentences that is not the subject and its modifiers. A predicate is the verb and the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. A sentence can have one or more predicates. A predicate may be just a verb.Examples of predicates in bold:Mary is driving. (the predicate is a verb only)He will come soon. (soon is an adverb modifying the verb 'will come')Mom made some chocolate chip cookies.We had some lunch and then went to the movie. (this sentence has two predicates)
Yes.Come in is a phrasal verb. The two words work together as if they are one verb.
For a verb to be transitive it must have a subject and an object. In order to make "moved" a transitive verb, the sentence would have to begin with a subject who did the moving and end with an object that was moved by the subject.
subject = you verb phrase = have ... noticed
yes example: From behind the pole came a fat man. The subject is "man," and "pole" is the verb. The verb comes before the suject.
A sentence must have a minimum of a subject (which can be a noun or a pronoun) and a verb; and a sentence must express a complete thought. Examples:I ran. (the subject is the pronoun 'I', the verbis 'ran')Minnie ran home. (the subject is the noun 'Minnie', the verb is 'ran')The dog ran after the cyclist. (the subject is the noun 'dog', the verb is 'ran')We love strawberries. (the subject is the pronoun 'we', the verb is 'love')There are some sentences that are a single word. An imperative sentence can consist of just the verb, the subject is implied. Examples:Stop! (the implied subject is the pronoun 'you', the verb is 'stop')Come here. (the implied subject is the pronoun 'you', the verb is 'come')
A subject pronoun most often comes before a verb as the subject of a sentence or a clause.However: A pronoun that is the subject of a subordinate or relative clause can come after the verb.Janet chose what she liked. Janet likesthe one I like.The subject pronoun of the second part of a compound sentence will come after the verb of the first part of the sentence.Janet cut the bread and she made a sandwich.
Yes subject and verb should always agree. Look at these examples: The boy likes ice cream. = subject (boy) and verb (likes) agree. The boy next door like ice cream = subject (boy) and verb (like) do not agree. The boy next door likes ice cream = subject (boy) and verb (likes) agree.
Ever is not a verb. It's an adverb.
Natural sentences are when the subject comes before the verb. For example: The baby kangaroo hides in its mother's pouch. The subject is kangaroo and the verb is hides. Kangaroo comes before hides so the sentence is natural. An inverted sentence is when the verb comes before the subject. An example is In its mother's pouch hides the baby kangaroo. The subject is kangaroo and the verb is hides. The verb comes before the subject. So this sentence is an inverted sentence.
subject conducting is a verb
"He" is the subject, and "was" is the verb.
The word come is a verb. Come is an irregular verb.
SV = Subject Verb (I like cake.)SSV = Subject, Subject, Verb (She and I like cake.)SVV = Subject, Verb, Verb (I like cake and hate yams.)SSVV = Subject, Subject, Verb, Verb (She and I like cake and hate yams.)
In a sentence, a verb would normally follow, as well as anything else in the predicate. As long as there are no other clauses, no subjects should follow the verb. EVER.