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Yes, "you" can be the subject in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "You are my friend," "you" is the subject.
You are the subject in the sentence. Your = the reader or You depending on the context.
at is the simple subject
My best friend (All the words in the subject make up the complete subject.)
That depends on which part of the sentence the phrase is in (whether those people are the subject of the sentence, or the object of it). If you're the subject of the sentence, it's "I" ("Your best friend and I want to take you to the club"); if you're the object, it's "me" ("Please do this for your best friend and me"). In either case, you can take the best friend out of the sentence for a moment, to determine whether you are "I" or "me".
The nouns in the sentence are:friend, common noun, subject of the sentence;Harry, proper noun, an appositive, renames the noun 'friend';boy, common noun, subject complement, renames the subject noun.
the new chemistry teacher at your schoolis the real answer A+
Best friend
the complete predicate in sentence is, "is my friend's cousin."
The subject of a sentence is WHO or WHAT the sentence is about.Examples:The man went to the store. The subject is man.My mother is at work. The subject is mother.John hit his head. The subject is John.That store is my favorite. The subject is store.My daughter's friend is home from college. The subject is friend.You are smart. The subject is you.He is my friend. The subject is he.Kevin's car crashed into a tree. The subject is car.This computer is awesome. The subject is computer.That cute, little baby smiled at me. The subject is baby.For each sentence, just ask WHO or WHAT is the sentence about. That is the subject. The subject is always a noun or a pronoun.
its subject-verb-direct object.
Certainly! An example of a complete subject is "The tall oak tree in the park."