The subject of the sentence: "The new teacher works very hard." is "teacher". Firstly identify the verb. The verb is "works". Ask who or what "works"? The answer is "teacher". the word "new" is an adjective. the words "hard" and "very" are both adverbs. "hard" aids our understanding of "works" and "very" aids our understanding of "hard".
"This argument" is the simple subject. "This kind of argument" is the subject (or compound subject). "is" is the predicate. "hard to answer" is the object.
You can have no homework if your teacher does not set you any. Not hard, its very simple...
"Eustace" is the simple subject.
The simple subject in the sentence "The employees at the factory were rewarded for their hard work" is "employees." It refers to the main noun that the sentence is about, which is the group being rewarded. The phrase "at the factory" is a prepositional phrase that provides additional information but does not alter the simple subject.
Employees
The subject of this sentence is the book.The answer is either book or Exodus???
Verbal phrase is a verbal with all its modifiers, but short of a subject. For example, in a sentence, "PLAYING TENNIS is a hobby among youth", 'playing tennis' is a verbal phrase.
maybe you just have a hard time concentrating or catching up, its alright everyone can experience that . especially in a subject like maths
proprotions are a subject of math that is very hard and not easy to solve and that my math teacher mrs scriven gives to me
Its really hard to tell it depends what subject you are talking about......but i would have to say Mrs. Stollow :)
Mary is a student who works hard
Present simple -- work or works I always work at home. She works in a supermarket. Present continuous -- am/is/are telling The doctor is working late. The boys are working hard.