The word 'week' is a noun. A noun can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the objectof a verb or a preposition.
Examples:
The week is almost over. (subject of the sentence)
In the time that a week takes, we'll be home. (subject of the relative clause)
We planned the week of the trip. (direct object of the verb 'planned')
There was enough food for the week. (object of the preposition 'for')
No, "week" is not a subject. It is a unit of time that refers to a period of seven days. In a sentence, "week" could be part of the subject, but it is not a subject on its own.
The simple subject in the sentence is "week." It is the noun that the sentence is mainly about.
In the sentence, "You saw himlast week." The pronouns are:you = subjective case (subject of the sentence)him = objective case (direct object of the verb 'saw')
No, the sentence is not correct. The pronoun 'I' is the first person subject pronoun; the pronoun 'me' is the first person object pronoun. The sentence should read:I want to thank you for taking time to meet Mariam and me last week.
Both "what days of the week" and "which days of the week" are correct; however, "which days of the week" is typically used when the choices are limited, while "what days of the week" is more open-ended.
The homophone for week is weak.
There are two versions of 'your brother and you' that can function as the subject of the sentence:"My brother and I read about the Wrights last week.""We read about the Wrights last week.""Your brother and you read about the Wrights last week.""You read about the Wrights last week." (the subject pronoun 'you' is functioning as the plural)
Then that's it!
The complete subject is 'one of the trucks'; the simple subject is 'one'.
your
your
The subject is aunt because the rest of the sentence is about her.
Mervyn Morris has written: 'On Holy Week' -- subject(s): Holy Week, Poetry
The complete subject is 'Kim's favorite breakfast cereal...', the simple subject is cereal.
The simple subject in the sentence is "week." It is the noun that the sentence is mainly about.
Frederick R. McManus has written: 'The ceremonies of the Easter vigil' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Liturgy and ritual. Holy Saturday rite 'The rites of Holy Week' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Liturgy and ritual. Holy Week rite, Holy Week 'Pontifical rite of the restored order of Holy Week' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Catholic Church. Liturgy and ritual. Holy Week rite, Holy Week 'Handbook for the new rubrics' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Divine office, Liturgy, Mass
aunt
William Shakespeare