"They" is the subject of that sentence.
Subject: They
Yes, "funny faces" is a noun phrase composed of the noun "faces" modified by the adjective "funny." Nouns can be modified by adjectives, and in this case, "funny" describes the type of faces being referred to.
The telling part of the sentence is "Amy was funny today," as it indicates that Amy displayed humor on that specific day.
The verb in the sentence is "wears."
Name could be used as a noun or verb."My name is Chelsea." Name is being used as a noun, specifically the subject, in this sentence."Please name the capital of the USA." Name is being used as the verb in this sentence. (Note: This sentence is imperative and therefore does not have a written subject. The subject is an understood "you".)
She laughed at his funny joke.
Yes. A sentence consists of a subject and a predicate (something you're saying about the subject). So "You" is the subject and "are funny" is the predicate.
The sentence, 'The play was very funny.' contains no pronouns. The = definite article play = noun, subject of the sentence was = verb very = adjective funny = adjective used as a noun, object of the sentence
it's funny how it ate its friends' food
Um Funny is to joke as serious is to....um....smack talk?
Normally a Limerick is funny.
its not funny its a serious job
serious
Yes, "funny faces" is a noun phrase composed of the noun "faces" modified by the adjective "funny." Nouns can be modified by adjectives, and in this case, "funny" describes the type of faces being referred to.
Es comico- You/He/She is/are funny. Es serio- You/He/She is/are serious.
first of all witty means funny and hysterical and the opposite is serious... like you're boss! so a sentence for it is My boss isn't very witty at all because he is very serious and he wants to get his job done
haha she can be hecka funny but then sometimes too serious
Is making is the verb. It shows what the air conditioner (subject) is doing.