are - a present tense plural be verb
his decisions which were usually well thought outis a sentence fragment. "Decisions" is the subject, and it has no verb.
the predicate of the sentence is usually called the verb in elementary school
Verb: Call
Like is the verb.
Found is the main verb.
The predicate is simply a fancy word for "verb". The simple predicate is only the verb, and the complete predicate includes the verb, modifiers (adjectives and adverbs), and prepositional phrases that usually is the rest of the sentence after the verb. (Except in poetry)
No. People is a noun. Example sentence: There were many people at the market.
In order for a sentence to contain a predicate adjective, it must have a linking verb. Questioned is the only verb in that sentence, and it's an action verb.
The sentence as it is written is not correct. It needs a verb, but 'doing' is an infinitive.A better sentence is:Ashok usually does his homework at night.
Yes, an imperative sentence typically begins with a verb to give a command, instruction, or request. It is direct and does not usually include a subject.
secetaries is different depending on what sentence but usually it is a noun
No, it is not a correct sentence. The pronouns 'her' and 'him' are objective pronouns, used for the object of a verb or a preposition. Your sentence has her and him as the subject of the verb 'have'. The corresponding subject pronouns are 'she' and 'he'. Corrected sentence: Did she and he have a disagreement today? However, when using the names of the people for a compound subject, both names are used, for example 'Jane and John". But when pronouns are used, the two people are usually referred to in the plural as 'they'. Better sentence: Did they have a disagreement today?