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subject = dog verb = ran
The present perfect tense of the word "walk" is "have walked" or "has walked," depending on the subject. For example, "I have walked to the park" or "She has walked to school."
Certainly! An example of a complete subject is "The tall oak tree in the park."
Walked is a verb.
The answer is "us"
Yes, the grammar of the sentence "The subject walked past the door" is correct. It has a subject ("The subject") and a verb ("walked") that agree in tense, and it conveys a complete thought.
It depends if you are using it as a subject or an object. The subject is "he and I" the object is "him and me" Examples: Sub.: He and I went to the park Object: Do you want to go to the park with him and me?
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A verb is a word for an action or a state of being.Examples:Venus Williams plays well. (the noun 'Venus Williams' is a proper noun, the name of a person, the subject of the sentence; the verb 'plays' is a word for an action)We walked to the park. (the verb 'walked' is a word for an action; the noun 'park' is a common noun. a word for a place, object of the preposition 'to')The pie is delicious. (the common noun 'pie' is a common noun, a word for a thing, the subject of the subject of the sentence; the verb 'is' is a word for a state of being)
Park
park is
He happily walked through the park.
us