Yes, "viewers" is the simple subject in that example. It's the subject of the verb "looked". The complete subject is "The viewers".
Yes, "viewers" is the simple subject in the sentence "The viewers looked into a special machine." It is the noun that the sentence is about.
Complete subject: he Complete predicate: looked at the corn he was angry
The present perfect tense of "look" is "have looked" or "has looked" depending on the subject.
The simple subject in the sentence is "puppy." It is the main noun that the sentence is about.
"Looked" can act as either a linking verb or a verb of perception. As a linking verb, it connects the subject to a subject complement that describes or renames the subject. As a verb of perception, it indicates someone is using their eyes to see or observe something.
To use "look" as an action verb, it typically follows the subject in a sentence to describe the act of directing your eyes toward something or someone. For example, "She looked out the window," or "I looked at the painting."
It is not possible to see the viewers unless if you do comment and likes on their videos. Only the number of viewers increases in the videos.
they looked across the still water which word is the subject
Complete subject: he Complete predicate: looked at the corn he was angry
The present perfect tense of "look" is "have looked" or "has looked" depending on the subject.
The machine looked sleek with a high build quality
she could turn people into stone when they looked at her
It looked like some old sewing machine.
it refered to the way machine gun fire looked like a zipper patern when it hit the vietnamise, looked like they had ben unzipped.
The predicate in that sentence is "looked like a huge white elephant". The subject is "it".
They were placed so close to bunkers so when men looked out
i think there is the dowsing machine app for poketch at the jubilife company
As television's popularity ballooned, some people began to questions its effects. Of special concern was TV's possible impact on children. On several occasions in the 1950s, Congress looked into the effect of violent content on young viewers. To adress this concern, the TV industry adopted its own voluntary standards.