"Foreboding" [note lack of a second "r"] can be used as a simple subject. It is the gerund form of the verb "forebode" and is used as a noun, as in, "A foreboding of doom can accompany an action destined to fail."
"Cherokee" is the simple subject in that sentence.
The simple subject in the sentence is "week." It is the noun that the sentence is mainly about.
The simple subject. A complete subject is the simple subject, or the main word along with any of the modifiers that might describe the subject.
Hours
The verb 'were' is the simple past tense used with a plural subject.The present tense used with a plural subject is are.Example: They were a mess but they are clean now.
It can be, it depends on how the word is used. The creatures ran when the fire came. = simple. The forest and its creatures escaped the fire. = complex subject
No. 'It' is a simple subject.
An analogy can be helpful in explaining complex concepts by drawing parallels between two different ideas or situations.
It can be.
The word "the" is an article, a type of adjective, not a subject.
Athletes must stay in good condition.
yes it is
"Cherokee" is the simple subject in that sentence.
The simple subject in the sentence is "week." It is the noun that the sentence is mainly about.
word.
Yes
May Brody go to the store with me? which word is the simple subject