A large collection of music manuscript.
The complete subject of the sentence is "a large collection of music manuscript." It includes the article "a" along with the descriptive phrase "of music manuscript," which specifies the type of collection.
The complete subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Marcus".
The complete subject in this sentence is "A fable."
The subject of the sentence is "she" and the predicate is "live."
The noun in a complete subject is the word or phrase that identifies the focus of the sentence and is typically the main topic or subject that the sentence is about.
Yes, "He" can be the complete subject of a sentence. For example, in the sentence "He is going home," "He" is the complete subject because it tells us who or what the sentence is about and is followed by the verb "is going."
The complete subject in the sentence given is "A valuable stamp collection".
if you reframe the sentence, you will get the complete subject: "trouble develops on the safari." the complete subject is "trouble."
example of sentence complete subject and complete predicate Listening=subject is not=complete predicate
The complete subject of the sentence is 'The class'.
The complete subject of the sentence is the title of the story, "The Golden Apples of the Sun", which should be in quote marks or italicized as a title in the sentence. (Yes, I know there are formatting limitations in the questions box, I just didn't want you to forget.)
The subject of the sentence is "she" and the predicate is "live."
no it does not
A complete sentence is comprised of a subject and a predicate. The subject is a noun or noun phrase, and the predicate essentially tells what the subject does.
any sentence with a subject and a predicate
no beacuse it does no have a predicate. to have a compllete sentence you need a subject and a predicate. The above answer is incorrect. The complete subject of a sentence such as "Autumn leaves need to be raked up." is "Autumn leaves". The answerer above mistook "Subject" for "Sentence" A complete sentence needs a verb, but a complete subject does not have a verb unless it is a clause.
The complete subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Marcus".
No, a complete sentence needs a subject and verb at least.