It can be either one; it depends on how you use it. "My blog is where I blog." <--That has subject and verb forms.
subject = blog
verb = is
It = subject who = object
The simple subject is "which" and the predicate is "have been misspelled."
The simple subject is Friends.
Sleeps is the verb Cat is the subject
Yes, the subject pronoun is "You".
It = subject who = object
no verb
The subject of the sentence is Isabel.
have is a verb. developed is a verb. interest is a subject. neighbor is a subject.
"skills" is the subject of this sentence. "Communication " modifies the subject.
The subject is he, and the verb is was.
The noun "Isabel" is the subject of the sentence "Isabel loves to play frisbee."
The simple subject of the sentence is "world."
The simple subject is "which" and the predicate is "have been misspelled."
No. The part of a sentence after the subject is the predicate'Boys were absent yesterday. The part of the sentence following the subject, written in bold, is the predicate.
Frank and Lois is the subject.
"She" is the subject of this sentence.