Plans is the verb in that sentence.
Jesus died to save the world
Betty, California, summer
Yes, there are two nouns in the sentence: plans and tomorrow
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
Example sentence - Their travel plans were tentative until they could pay for the flights.
Example sentence - Knowing our plans could change quickly, we tentatively accepted the invitation.
The correct spelling is join.An example sentence is "Paul plans to join the police".
The pronoun use in the sentence, "Julie plans to travel this summer with Oscar and you." is technically correct, it is traditional to put the pronoun 'you', as representing the one you are speaking to first in a group: "Julie plans to travel this summer with you and Oscar."
No. As of August 2015, there does not appear to be any plans to revive the Atomic Betty cartoon.
Yes, there are two nouns in the sentence: plans and tomorrow
The pronoun in the sentence is you, a word that takes the place of the noun for the person spoken to as the object of the preposition 'with'.
The cost of gasoline made their summer plans too expensive. The small engine ran on gasoline mixed with oil.
summer
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
A person can get inexpensive health plans in California from companies such as Anthem Blue Cross, Blue Shield of California, Cigna, and Kaiser Permanente of California.
The noun 'summer' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example:Summer is just around the corner. (subject of the sentence)In the heat that summer brings we take refuge in the mountains. (subject of the relative clause)We have the summer to finish the job. (direct object of the verb 'have')What are your plans for summer. (object of the preposition 'for)
The plans were doable. The plans were outrageous and not doable.
No. Maybe in 2011.
Blue Shield of California offers both individual and family health care plans as well as Medicare plans. In terms of the individual and family plans they come with either PPO or HSA options.