"you" is the understood subject.
The word 'you' is not a noun, you is a pronoun. The pronoun you takes the place of the name of the person or persons spoken to.The word 'you' is the only understood (unnamed) subject of a sentence.
If the subject of the sentence is first person, the verb must be in first person form as well. For example, "I am going to the store" where "am" is the first person singular form of the verb "to be."
Yes, it is. It translates to "[understood subject] is tall." the understood subject is either He, She, It or You (formal) (El/Ella/Usted)
Understood "you"
The Imperative Mood can be used only in the second person. The subject of the sentence is often omitted when the Imperative Mood is used. In such sentences, the subject you is said to be "understood".
"you" is the understood subject.
The subject of the sentence is state, the subject is the class.An understood subject is a subject that is not stated in the sentence, usually an imperative sentence. Example:"Stop!" (the understood subject is you)"Bring me my glasses." (the understood subject is you)An understood subject can be a pronoun that has no antecedent, the subject is understood by the speaker and the person spoken to. Example:"Look, at her. She needs a fashion makeover" (only the speaker and listener know who is the subject of these sentences)"Oh, here is the one I've been looking for." (the speaker is likely holding up or gesturing toward the object referred to as 'the one')
It's called "You understood". In commands, you don't always say the name of the person you're speaking to. A general rule is, if the sentence would still make sense if you inserted "you", tje subject is an "understood" you. "You" or a person's name are not written down, but it's understood that the command is given to someone.
the subject you understand
An understood subject pronoun is not part of the sentence, it is understood by the speaker and the listener. For example:'Push, don't pull.' (The understood subject pronoun is 'you'; You push, you don't pull.)
yes and when it is put into a sentece it is called an interogative sentece with the subject understood to be you
The subject is the entity that is doing the action of the sentence; the subject is expressed or understood. In an imperative like "Take the bus" for example, the subject is You (understood).
The word 'you' is not a noun, you is a pronoun. The pronoun you takes the place of the name of the person or persons spoken to.The word 'you' is the only understood (unnamed) subject of a sentence.
the subject is "You understood".
The subject is Understood You. That's the subject because the sentence is imperative (demanding you to do something) and whenever you have an imperative sentence the subject is always Understood You.
learned.