Both sat and reading are verbs therefore there are two verbs.
There are two sections involving reading. One is reading comprehension and the second is grammar.
Yes. We say Go tell it on the mountain, for example. But also you may find an unrelated verb next to the main verb of a sentence when the unrelated verb is part of the subject. For example The people who regularly attend were there.
No, they are not the same. The two tests are administered by different agencies and the SAT contains math, critical reading, and writing.
No a verb phrase has two or more words eg has eaten, will be awake, had been seeing
I'm not sure who 'they" is in your question, but most colleges consider all three parts of your SAT score. However, colleges often place more significance on your scores on the math and critical reading parts of the SAT, as those parts of the SAT have been in existence for decades, whereas the writing part is new. If you see an SAT score on which only two parts of the SAT have been reported, it is almost always the math and critical reading parts.
There isn't a conversion between the two. The SAT I is the standard math, reading, writing test, which is required for most colleges. The SAT II, know as SAT Subject Tests, are one hour tests in one subject only. These tests allow you to show your strengths in particular subjects - especially the sciences and foreign languages as these are not tested on the SAT I - but most students take them because some colleges require them. SAT II scores have varying curves depending on the test, so conversion to SAT I scores is impossible.
Yes.Come in is a phrasal verb. The two words work together as if they are one verb.
In the old SAT test, before 2016, critical reading includes reading different types of passages. Students would be asked to analyze the tone, word choice, language, and meaning behind certain sections. There was also a sentence completion section where you had to choose the best grammatically correct sentence.
The main verb is "feed" whilst the helping verb is "can".
A subject is a sentence with a noun in it. So you would have two nouns in that sentence. A verb is an action word. So a sentence with two subjects and one verb must include two nouns and one action word. for example: Sally and Ikicked a ball. Sally and the word I are the nouns. (a noun is a person,place,thing, or an idea)The verb of this sentence would be kicked. I think a sentence with two subjects and one verb is called a compound sentence. I hope this answered your question!
The average SAT score for most colleges is 1,538, top schools like a score of 2,100 or more. I have a related link listed below that has some helpful test sources, to assist with increasing test scores.
In "One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish", the Nook was reading a book about how to cook with a hook.