grapes
Well the answer is easy to put in words but very hard to do. Firstly you eat some food to prepare for the hard task ahead of you (if do not do this will die of exhaustion). Secondly you think of the rest of the sentence (i no its hard) e.g i had some grapes. Now you put I had some grapes! Finally you type f.a.n.t.a.s.t.i.c in the gap so you end up with i had some fantastic grapes. tada
In the sentence, 'Throw the ball as hard as you can.', the word 'throw' is the verb. In this imperative sentence, the subject of the sentence is implied; the subject is you.
No, "Hit the stone hard." is not a complete sentence as it is missing a subject.
Leave it as is ? It's a complete sentence.
The subject of this sentence is the book.The answer is either book or Exodus???
"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.
Yes, the word it can be the subject of a sentence. It is hot outside today. It hasn't rained this hard in ten years!
In Chapter 14 of "Esperanza Rising," titled "Grapes," Esperanza learns about the hard work and difficult conditions faced by Mexican migrant workers in the United States. She experiences firsthand the backbreaking labor of picking grapes in a sweltering vineyard and gains a new appreciation for the sacrifices made by those who toil in the fields for a better future.
By definition a fragment is just "part" of a sentence. I suppose you could have the subject in that part, but it would be hard to refer to it as the subject without the rest of the sentence to define it's role.
Employees
Map protection is a very hard subject to learn about.
That is hard to say, grapes come in many sizes.