Sequoyah
The simple subject in the sentence is "Sequoyah."
Yes, the sentence is correctly capitalized. The proper nouns "George," "Western Region," and "Region" are all capitalized.
No, the subject of a sentence cannot be the indirect object. The subject is the doer of the action, while the indirect object is the recipient of the action. They serve different grammatical roles within a sentence.
No. For a sentence to contain a direct object, the verb must be transitive (a type of action verb). "Was" is a linking verb, and "furious" is the subject complement. Subject complements and direct objects are not the same thing.
A nominative pronoun is a pronoun that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause. A nominative pronoun may be called a subject pronoun or subjective pronoun.The nominative pronouns are: I, you, he, she it, we, they, who, whoever.Examples:You and I can meet or lunch. (subject of the sentence)George got off the train when he got to Broadway. (subject of the clause)
Yes, a subjective pronoun is ALWAYS nominative case.A subjective pronoun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause.Examples.They are my favorite flowers. (subject of the sentence)The man who called is my neighbor. (subject of the relative clause)When George got to 19th Street, he got off the train. (subject of the second part of the sentence)
sequoyah a Cherokee Indian made the Cherokee alphabet
The English name for Sequoyah is George Gist or George Guess. He is most well known for creating a system of symbols that allowed the Cherokee to read and write.
Syllabary
George N. Fenin has written: 'The Western, from silents to cinerama' -- subject(s): History and criticism, Western films 'The western'
the syllabary, created by sequoyah, also known as george gist
George Western Thompson has written: 'In spem' 'The living forces of the universe ...' -- subject(s): Philosophy and religion
Sequoia
Yes, the sentence is correctly capitalized. The proper nouns "George," "Western Region," and "Region" are all capitalized.
No, the subject of a sentence cannot be the indirect object. The subject is the doer of the action, while the indirect object is the recipient of the action. They serve different grammatical roles within a sentence.
George F. Kossaifi has written: 'Poverty in western Asia' -- subject(s): Poverty
George Western's birth name is Ernest George Western.
Yes, it is, in all grammatical ways a sentence.