Actually, there are more than three of them. These are simple subject, simple predicate, complete subject and complete predicate. I can say this because we are studying these.:)
When you learn speak english? (Not a complete sentence.)
No, "Is what" is not a complete sentence in proper English. It is grammatically incorrect and lacks subject-verb agreement. It needs additional context or words to form a complete and coherent sentence.
Yes, the sentence 'Where are you?' is a correct sentence. The three words are a complete thought with a subject, the pronoun 'where', and a verb, 'is'.
'Go' is the shortest complete sentence.Your English is impossible to understand.
In English grammar, a clause is a group of words that contains both a subject and a verb. It can be a complete sentence (independent clause) or a part of a sentence (dependent clause). Clauses are essential building blocks of sentences and can function as a complete thought or as a modifier within a sentence.
The shortest English sentence is 'it is'. It has a noun and a verb, which is what every sentence must have. 'It' is the noun and 'is' is the verb.Well, actually, the shortest English sentence would have to be I am or I go or I do, any of which is one letter shorter. Grammatically speaking, Go as a command is also a complete sentence, as is Be. If you include unqualified interjections, then the hands-down winner would have to be O!
"Go!" is the shortest complete sentence, since an imperative (an order, such as "Go!" ) can stand alone in English without a subject. In this kind of sentence, the pronoun "you" is the implied subject.
Él tiene means: he has. It is phrase and not a complete sentence.
No. The sentence you are needing is "I think English is fun to learn" or "I think learning English is fun".
The default language of the United Kingdom is (British) English.
A quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
No. It lacks a main verb, and there is no such word as "prefence."