Does a sentence need a subject?
Yes, that is a complete sentence because it has a subject (he) and a verb (refused), although it does need a period after 'refused'. That's all you need to form a sentence.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
The pronoun 'I' is used as the subject of the sentence or phrase; the pronoun 'me' is used as the object of the sentence or phrase.The word It's is the contraction for 'Itis', in this case they are the subject and verb of your sentence or phrase, which means that you need an object for your sentence or phrase:It is me.It's me.
You need 1 capital letter 2 proper sentence structure ( subject noun, verb) 3 end mark
The subject of the sentence tells you who it is about.Jenny is nice.Jenny is the subject of this sentence."What" a sentence is about, however, includes a verb (predicate). Generally you need a subject and predicate to make sense of a sentence.For example:I walk home. (subject I, predicate walk,complete predicate walk home)
The subject of the sentence is "she" and the predicate is "live."
The need for action is directed to the person spoken to.This is an imperative sentence. The subject of an imperative sentence can be implied, not said. The implied subject of this sentence is you.
To have a complete sentence, you need a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is being said about the subject). The subject is typically a noun or pronoun, while the predicate includes a verb and any additional information describing the subject or action.
The subject of the noun clause "what you need" is you.
no beacuse it does no have a predicate. to have a compllete sentence you need a subject and a predicate. The above answer is incorrect. The complete subject of a sentence such as "Autumn leaves need to be raked up." is "Autumn leaves". The answerer above mistook "Subject" for "Sentence" A complete sentence needs a verb, but a complete subject does not have a verb unless it is a clause.
Not necessarily, the subject of a sentence is who or whatthe sentence is about:The bird sat on Mary's hair. (In this sentence, the subject is 'bird' not Mary. The sentence is about what the bird did.)The ball hit the garage window and smashed it. (In this sentence, the subject is 'ball' and what happened with it; there is no person in this sentence and it doesn't need one.)Mario hit the ball. (In this sentence, the person, 'Mario" is the subject.)
You need a subject and a verb
A complete sentence needs to have a subject and a predicate. subject = a person, place, thing or abstract idea. predicate = an action
Yes, that is a complete sentence because it has a subject (he) and a verb (refused), although it does need a period after 'refused'. That's all you need to form a sentence.
The verb in the sentence is "need." It is the action word that expresses the subject's requirement or necessity to learn.
Rhinos
No.