Yes, "She ran." is a complete sentence because it has a subject and a verb.
Yes, it has a verb and a subject.
Ran is the verb in that sentence>
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
felt and ran
There is a few ways you can write a sentence that has to the words "also-run". You can write it back "I also ran along with the team".
The simple predicate is "ran".
Ran is the verb in that sentence>
The correct sentence is "You ran to school."
It takes the place of a noun. In the sentence "The cat ran", the pronoun "it" can be used to replace "the cat" to make the sentence "It ran."
Sara ran towards the house.
ran tired
"She got up and ran after it" is a complete sentence because it contains a subject (she) and a predicate (got up and ran after it) and expresses a complete thought.
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
The compound verb in the sentence is "sniffed" and "ran".
The adverb in that sentence is downstairs. It's an adverb of place and tells where you ran.
The complete subject in the sentence is "Javier".
The correct way to say the sentence is, "Mr. Jones and he ran the fair."
No, because it cannot stand alone as a sentence.