The complete subject is "The whole family". The simple subject is "family".
The subject in the sentence is "the whole family." It is the noun that performs the action of eating dinner.
The complete subject in the sentence is "The whole class".
The verb in the sentence is "was," which is the linking verb connecting the subject "neighborhood" to the subject complement "dark."
The correct grammar for the sentence would be: "All staff use whole group instruction." Change "uses" to "use" to match the plural subject "staff."
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
"Her father" is a singular subject pronoun in this sentence. A subject pronoun performs the action in the sentence, while an object pronoun receives the action. In this case, "Her father" is performing the action of being happy to have the kitten.
The subject is family
YES!
We usually have a family dinner or we go to a restaurant with the whole family.
You can find great family dinner recipes online. The Disney website has a great selection of family friendly dinner recipes that are sure to please the whole family. You can check out Disney's dinner recipes by following this link:http://familyfun.go.com/recipes/dinner-entrees/
It is the topic sentence.
You should eat dinner and lunch at your house so u can celebrate your whole family
The whole sentence is an independent clause. Unless...... if you were trying to say: You burned your dinner and you went out to eat.This would me 2 independent clause. These would be (you burned your dinner) and (you went out to eat)
when having family time or a familf dinner it brings the whole family closer together and lets eachother know about important events in eachothers life. besides it allows you to get more comfprtable and open with your family. its a healthy thing.
The subject in this sentence is "class."
No, the term 'whole family' is a noun phrase, a group of words based on a noun that can function as a unit in a sentence.The noun phrase 'whole family' is made up of the noun 'family' described by the adjective 'whole'.Example functions:The whole family loves to go camping. (subject of the sentence)Grandma made enough to feed the whole family. (direct object of the verb 'to feed')Note: In the example sentences, the article 'the' is part of the complete noun phrase 'the whole family'.
The simple subject is the noun team.The complete subject is 'The whole team'.In an interrogative sentence (a question), the verb and subject may be transposed, for example, "Why was the whole team penalized?" is a transposed form of "The whole team was penalized, why?"
AllRecipes.com has vegetarian, pescatarian, ovolactotarian, and vegan options your whole family will love. You can browse through their recipes and you'll be inspired to cook something great for dinner.