mail.
The simple subject in the sentence is "mail." It is the noun that the sentence is about.
The total subject is "the device"; the simple subject is "device".
you
No. A sentence must contain a subject and a verb. "Here's why" does not have a subject or a verb.
Yes
In this sentence, "was" is a linking verb. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence with a subject complement that renames or describes it, in this case "expecting a package in the mail."
You can sit here. What is the naming part of the sentance?
the subject is problem and the verb is answer
A sentence must have a subject and predicate to be a sentence. The exception is when the subject is inferred. "going to the sale" is not a sentence. It needs a subject. We are going to the sale. is a sentence. Speaking to another person, "Stay here" is a sentence. The subject "you" is inferred.
I am not a grammar expert so this is a personal opinion. I think it is a sentence. Consider "Here's Tom" or "Here's the bus". They are sentences. Tom is here; the bus is here. Here's why means 'why is here', or 'this [here] is the reason [why]. It is not a particularly good sentence mind you, but it is a sentence.
The subject of the sentence is "the winning Float."
Subject: the ginger bread manPredicate: Here goes