loves
Oh, dude, the simple subject is "He" and the simple predicate is "loves." The complete subject is "He loves to send emails to his family and friends" and the complete predicate is "now." So, like, there you have it.
she loves her parents
because apples is obsessed by fluffy and love.
The personal pronoun 'she' is the subjective case, a word that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause and as a predicate nominative.The personal pronoun 'she' takes the place of a singular noun for a specific female.Examples:Martha made the cake. She loves to bake. (subject of the second sentence)The cake that she made is her own recipe. (subject of the relative clause)The baker of the cake was she. (predicate nominative, restates the subject noun 'baker')
SUBJECT and PREDICATE EXAMPLES: 1: the girl in the prom wore a white satin gown. \ / SUBJECT Predicate 2: Anna ate apple / \ SUBJECT Predicate 3: Limwell Loves the outdoors. / \ SUBJECT Predicate 4: Jessica Gave Alpha a Hug / \ SUBJECT Predicate 5: We all want piece. / \ SUBJECT predicate
Saad khali. or if you want to be polite, fluffy.
superman is a super cool dude who loves to eat pie on Sundays and has a really cool curl in his hair and loves cats his cats name is fluffy he loves poop
What about: "The koala loves to eat eucalyptus leaves." It's very simple, but you can add adjectives or anything else to make it more interesting (:
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
A simple sentence is a sentence with one independent clause, but it can not have any dependent clauses. So I would start off with a really easy sentence like Mrs. Rogers loves to play. And then add adjectives to describe Mrs. Rogers. The beautiful, smart, loving, kind, Mrs. Rogers loves to play. Then you could add what she loves to play like a piano and guitar. The beautiful, smart, loving, kind Mrs. Rogers loves to play piano and guitar. Then start adding adjectives to the piano and guitar. The beautiful, smart, loving, kind Mrs. Rogers loves to play an old, antique Baldwin eighteenth century piano and a rustic, old, brown guitar. You could continue adding to the sentence by saying how she played the instruments, where she played them, when she played them... But you have a start on a sentence! Just the most important thing you have to remember is: Don't make it a compound or complex sentence by adding another independent clause or dependent clause!
Oh, dude, the verb in that sentence is "loves." It's like the action word, you know, showing what Sam is all about, his love for basketball. So, yeah, "loves" is the verb there. Cool, right?
no, vanessa only loves u if u love soul eater (anime) and ur name is fluffy!!