No. Rode is the only verb in that sentence.
No, "Scott rode the icebreaker and the snowmobile" does not contain a compound subject. In this sentence, "Scott" is the subject, and "rode the icebreaker and the snowmobile" is the predicate, where "the icebreaker and the snowmobile" are part of the compound object, not the subject. A compound subject would involve two or more subjects performing the same action, such as "Scott and his friend rode the icebreaker."
A subject can be compound or singular. If it is compound, then both are the subject. Example:John and Jeff rode their bikes.
The predicate is that part of the sentence that contains the verb. He ran and jumped and shouted and cried. 'He' is the subject. 'ran and jumped and shouted and cried' is the predicate and because it contains more than one verb, it is a compound predicate.
To convert snowmobile hours into miles, you need to know the average speed of the snowmobile. First, determine the average speed in miles per hour (mph). Then, multiply the number of hours ridden by this average speed. For example, if you rode for 5 hours at an average speed of 20 mph, you would cover 100 miles (5 hours x 20 mph = 100 miles).
david r Scott and James Irwin,They travelled a total 17 miles (27km) in the rover.
David Scott and James Irwin rode the lunar rover on the moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971.
i rode a bike i rode my bike this weekend
rode
Verb: to ride; simple past: rode; past participle: ridden It would NOT be correct to say "have rode", since rode is not the participle. You would either say "we rode them" or "we have ridden them" to be correct.
¨Sandals: Walked on ¨Donkeys: Rode on ¨Boats: Rode on ¨Horses: Rode on
Rode - you would say 'Bart rode his bike' or 'Lisa rode her pony'
France Rode was born in 1934.