"Man" is the subject, "is" is the verb.
The subject is the chicken, and the verb is ran. The chicken is obviously the subject because it is what the sentense is about, it is following through with the action of the verb, which is running away from the dog. The verb is always the action word.
if you reframe the sentence, you will get the complete subject: "trouble develops on the safari." the complete subject is "trouble."
The complete subject of this sentence is "The cat." Everything from "purred" on is part of the predicate. The cat did what? Purred. How? With pleasure. At what? At the visitor's skill.
No, the word 'afraid' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.The adjective 'afraid' is most often used as a predicate adjective (subject complement), the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence. Examples:He is afraid of snakesShe was afraid that she would be late.They were not afraid of hard work.
one
The simple subject of the sentence in the question is brother.
Marta
The noun "brother" is the simple subject and "your brother" is the complete subject.
Brother is the simple subject.
The simple subject is "brother".
brother
Brother
brother
A subject in a sentence is what the topic is or what the sentence is talking about. Not really. The subject is the person or thing that is doing the action (verb). My brother bought a new car. Who bought the car? My brother, he is the one that did the action/verb (buy) he is the subject. We always go to the cinema on Tuesdays. Subject is we.
It = subject who = object
The subject of the sentence is Isabel.
The correct pronoun is "I", the subjective, first person singular personal pronoun.The noun phrase "My brother and I" is the compound subject of the sentence.