Mrs. Marcus is the complete subject of the sentence.
The complete subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Marcus".
I would not to like to see this sentence in a student's paper. Instead of starting a sentence with a pronoun, name the person. Use the following as an example: Marcus is so short that he cannot reach the basin.
it is in the active voice. <3 c: have fun with your english!
No, the correct way to form the possessive form of "Marcus" is to add an apostrophe followed by another "s" (Marcus's). This is the standard rule for creating possessives of singular nouns ending in "s."
"Marcus" is the same in French.
In Russian, the name Marcus is translated as ΠΠ°ΡΠΊ (Mark).
"Is Marcus one of the greatest quarterbacks in our school history?" would be a complete sentence.
Mrs. Marcus is the simple subject. The subject is who or what performs the action in the sentence.
The simple subject is "Mrs. Marcus."
In the sentence 'The pizza Marcus made you was delicious,' the type of complement 'you' is is called a direct object.
Marcus Tanner has written: 'Croatia' -- subject(s): History
Marcus Reichert has written: 'The Miracle of Fontana's Monkey' 'Art & ego' -- subject(s): Aesthetics 'Hoboken' -- subject(s): Fiction
Emanuel Marcus has written: 'Principles of surgical practice' -- subject(s): Surgery
Marcus Hartog has written: 'Problems of life and reproduction' -- subject(s): Reproduction
Marcus Lyndale has written: 'Diggers' 'Eternal knowledge' -- subject(s): Fiction
Marcus A. McCorison has written: 'Vermont papermaking, 1784 - l820' -- subject(s): Papermakers
Marcus Flacks has written: 'Classical Chinese furniture' -- subject(s): Furniture, History
Landau Marcus has written: 'Die Quellen des Dekameron' -- subject(s): Sources