Bill
Say that the sentence is Bill and his friend walked to school. "Bill and his friend" is the complete subject.:)
The sentence should be "Bill and he had about 600 dollars between the two of them." "Him" is the object form, while "he" is the subject form, which is correct in this case as "he" is the subject of the verb "had."
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.
A simple subject is a noun or a pronoun.A complete subject can be a noun, a pronoun, a noun phrase, or a noun clause.Examples:Bob washed the car today.The noun 'Bob' is the simple subject.The noun 'Bob' is the complete subject.My brother Bob washed the car today.The noun 'Bob' is the simple subject.The noun phrase 'my brother Bob' is the complete subject.Bob and Bill washed the car today.The noun phrase 'Bob and Bill' is a compound simple subject.The noun phrase 'Bob and Bill' is the complete subject.My brothers Bob and Bill washed the car today.The noun phrase 'Bob and Bill' is a compound simple subject.The noun phrase 'my brothers Bob and Bill' is the complete subject.They washed the car today.The pronoun 'they' is the simple subject.The pronoun 'they' is the complete subject.What she wants is her car washed.The pronoun 'what' is the simple subject.The relative clause 'what she wants' is the complete subject.
Bill Brower has written: 'The complete barbershop joke book' -- subject(s): Barbers, Humor
Yes, "Bill and he" is the compound subject of the sentence. The pronoun "he" is a subjective personal pronoun.
Yes. She found is correct, Bob and Bill found is correct so She, Bob and Bill found is correct.
A sentence is a complete thought with a noun and verb.A sentence fragment is just part of a sentence and does not make a complete thought.The above are sentences.Here are some fragments that make no sense:the sentence fragment?what is?your answer in a complete sentencethe boy who lived down the streetbecause he had to go home
That subject was deleted from this year's encyclopedia. Unfamiliar with Namibia, Bill had to look up its entry in the encyclopedia.
A predicate is the part of the sentence that describes the action, whereas the subject is the part of the sentence that describes who is doing the action. The predicate may just be a verb, but it can also involve adverbs, conjunctions, helping verbs, and so forth, all of which help to describe the action of the sentence. Here is a sentence in which the predicate is just a verb: Bill left. Bill is the subject, left is the predicate. But you could also say, Bill left suddenly. In that case, left suddenly is the predicate.
He ran away.
Mary, Sheila, Nancy and I attended the meeting.The House and the Senate failed to agree on a bill.