yes
I ate a sandwich today
what ever you want to put on a sandwich is what is on a sandwich
I am your sandwich
they ate a sandwich
A seagull ate her sandwich.
seagulls "A flock of seagulls ate my sandwich."
no because its in you stomach
The sentence "Joan ate the sandwich" follows a simple subject-verb-object (SVO) structure. "Joan" is the subject who performs the action, "ate" is the verb that describes the action, and "the sandwich" is the object that receives the action. This straightforward structure conveys a complete thought clearly and concisely.
a sandwich! he gambled for 24 hours and only ate meat between toast the whole time. they named this after his estate- sandwich. not his name.
indefinite articles. we use 'a' before a consonant: He ate a sandwich. We use 'an' before a vowel: She ate an apple.
The direct object of the verb 'ate' is sandwich, a singular, common, concrete noun.The object of the preposition 'for' is lunch, a singular, common, abstract noun.
It's just a man who ate the sandwich and named it after him.