[A spontaneous demonstration] rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.
Note: In this sentence the noun "demonstration" is the simple subject. This is arrived at by asking the verb rumbled a "what" question. Here though the words "a" and "spontaneous" do modify the simple subject and are properly treated as a part of the full subject in general.
The simple subject is situated at the extreme end of this sentence: demonstration.
demonstration
The simple subject is "referee" and the complete subject is "the referee."
A simple subject is a thing. If it were talking about a Baseball or a sentence the baseball is the simple subject.
If the subject at all, many babies would be the complete subject and babies the simple subject.
Complete Subject, (I think)
Student is the simple subject. The subject is who performs the action of the verb.
The simple subject is "demonstration."
The subject would be "demonstration."
Simple Subject: demonstration
demonstration
demonstration
demonstration You can tell more easily by rewriting the sentence in standard word order: A spontaneous demonstration rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.
[A spontaneous demonstration] rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.Note: In this sentence the noun "demonstration" is the simple subject. This is arrived at by asking the verb rumbled a "what" question. Here though the words "a" and "spontaneous" do modify the simple subject and are properly treated as a part of the full subject in general.
[A spontaneous demonstration] rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.Note: In this sentence the noun "demonstration" is the simple subject. This is arrived at by asking the verb rumbled a "what" question. Here though the words "a" and "spontaneous" do modify the simple subject and are properly treated as a part of the full subject in general.
This sentence doesn't have s+v+O word order so it is not easy to pick the s+v. If you rewrite the sentence:A spontaneous demonstration rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.The verb is rumbled, so ask your self - what rumbled? - and the answer is "A spontaneous demonstration". If the subject is a noun phrase then the simple subject is just the noun. In this case the noun is demonstration.Probably the word order of the sentence is changed for effect.
This sentence doesn't have s+v+O word order so it is not easy to pick the s+v. If you rewrite the sentence:A spontaneous demonstration rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.The verb is rumbled, so ask your self - what rumbled? - and the answer is "A spontaneous demonstration". If the subject is a noun phrase then the simple subject is just the noun. In this case the noun is demonstration.Probably the word order of the sentence is changed for effect.
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These oily rags are subject to spontaneous combustion.