A compound subject has two or more subjects.
In the sentence "Jerry and Carl went to the movies", "Jerry" and "Carl" are the compound subjects.
In the sentence "Bob, the ice-cream man, and Sue, his new wife, are going to Memphis on their honeymoon", "Bob" and "Sue" are the simple compound subjects, and "Bob, the ice-cream man" and "Sue, his new wife" are the complete compound subjects.
Be warned - on tests on compound subjects, teachers don't want you to put "Jerry and Carl"; they prefer "Jerry, Carl".
A subject can be compound or singular. If it is compound, then both are the subject. Example:John and Jeff rode their bikes.
compound subject
A compound subject is a sentance with two or more subjects.
Tony and I went to the movies. Tony and I is the compound subject.
a compound subject is two or more subjects joined by a conjuction
The subject isn't compound -- Kate is the subject.Wrote and edited is the compound predicate.
Some compound subject pronouns are someone, anyone, everyone, and whoever.
first of all your sentence is incorect! it would be "What is "a" compound subject"anyways a compound subject is when you have two subjects like in this sentence-Dave and Bill went to the movies together to see 2012.Dave and Bill would be the compound subject.
The sentence describes a compound subject, specifically a compound subject of a sentence as it consists of two separate subjects, "Gina" and "Sydney."
Yes
No it is not.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.