It's the past-tense form of the verb wear.
Yes this is a sentence because it does have a subject (Todd) and a predicate (wore).subject- what the sentence is aboutpredicate- what the subject does or did
The simple subject is Igorots and the only predicate is wore.
In this sentence, Sam and you is the subject and wore your suits is the predicate. Same, you, and suits are nouns. Wore is a verb.
By itself, no. "Wore something formal today," has no subject. In informal writing you could say the sentence has an assumed subject of "I," so for example: Dear Diary, Wore something formal today. Went to the party. Had a good time. But if you add an explicit subject, it's definitely correct: Jane wore something formal today. My daughter also wore something formal today.
The simple subject in the sentence, Our task was to graph how many students wore red, would be task. Our is an adjective to modify task.
The simple subject in the sentence, Our task was to graph how many students wore red, would be task. Our is an adjective to modify task.
If a sentence, it would be a question: Who usually wore a black beret? If just a clause, it needs a subject and verb.
the complete subject is movie and the simple subject gown.... and how old are you? You should know this! LOL
The pronouns that will replace the noun phrase 'the young girl' are she as a subject and her as an object in a sentence.Examples:The young girl wore a blue dress. (subject of the sentence)She wore a blue dress. (subject of the sentence)I saw the young girl in the blue dress. (direct object of the verb 'saw')I saw her in the blue dress. (direct object of the verb 'saw')
There are three parts of a sentence: subject, verb, and object. EXAMPLE "A boy (the subject) throws (the verb) a ball (the object)."
Answer That was the age of which they wore suits of Armor. It is a very interesting subject to learn!
That - pronoun, subject of sentence is - verb a - indefinite article very - adverb loud - adjective boat - object There should be a period or at lease a semicolon here. Otherwise you create a run-on sentence. Something - pronoun and subject must - auxiliary verb be - verb, infinitive wrong - adjective with - conjunction it - pronoun and object. In the sentence- "Sam and I wore our suits": Sam- Noun and- conjunction I- pronoun (Sam & I are also the subject of the sentence) wore- verb our- possessive pronoun suits- noun (name of clothing)