subject verb
The formula to form the simple future tense is: Subject + Will + Verb For example: I + Will + Sing
a verb that agrees with the closest subject
Yes. It's a linking verb. "You are smart." "You" is the subject. "Are" is the verb.
The simple future tense is formed like so: Subject + Will + Verb For example: I will run.
subject verb
WERE is a verb like for example you were we were
Intransitive verbs: the verb only has a subject. For example: "he runs", "it falls." Transitive verbs: the verb has a subject and a direct object. For example: "she eats fish", "we hunt nothing." Ditransitive verbs: the verb has a subject, a direct object, and an indirect object. For example: "He gives her a flower."
You can change the statement to yes-no questions by following this patterns: -if the verb is in form of be verb, move it before the subject. example= She is naive. = Is she naive? (be verb + subject = is + she) -if the verb is in form of verb do (do-plural,does-singular,did-past tense) place the subject between do verb and base form of verb. example= He looks gentle. = Does he look gentle? (verb do + subject + baseform = Does + he + look)
A simple sentence typically consists of one subject and one verb. For example, "She runs" has the subject 'she' and the verb 'runs'.
The simple present tense follows this structure/formula: Subject + Verb For example: I sing. For negative sentences, there is an addition of an auxiliary verb: Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Do" + Verb For example: I do not like him.
You can change the statement to yes-no questions by following this patterns: -if the verb is in form of be verb, move it before the subject. example= She is naive. = Is she naive? (be verb + subject = is + she) -if the verb is in form of verb do (do-plural,does-singular,did-past tense) place the subject between do verb and base form of verb. example= He looks gentle. = Does he look gentle? (verb do + subject + baseform = Does + he + look)
The present form of the verb "be" is "am," "is," and "are" depending on the subject of the sentence. For example: I am, he is, they are.
A subject verb is created when the act of doing something becomes the subject of a sentence. For example, although swimming is a verb, in the statement, "Swimming is fun," the act of swimming is now the subject of the sentence.
No, the word "have" is not a subject. It is a verb that typically denotes possession or ownership in a sentence. The subject is the noun or pronoun that performs the action of the verb.
A form of a verb called a gerund can be a subject. For example, the word "watching" is a gerund. We can say, "Watching TV is interesting."
Yes. Example: I accelerated forward. "I" is the subject, "accelerated" is the verb, and "forward" is the adverb.