The kids really enjoyed the Clowns and Jugglers at the Circus today.
Let's go to the circus! That compact car belongs in the circus!
The class had become a wild circus in the teacher's absence.
last night I went to the circus with my friends
That circus was bizzare!
The infinitive phrase is "to join the circus" (an adverbial phrase).
When I was at the circus a mime kept mimicing me
We're going to the circus today."We're" is the attraction of "we" and "are", put together. Therefore the above sentence is the same as:We are going to the circus today.
No, a complex sentence must have at least one dependent clause in addition to an independent clause. "Jenny was the largest elephant in the circus" contains only an independent clause, so it is a simple sentence. An example of a complex sentence would be, "Before Alfred arrived, Jenny was the largest elephant in the circus."
The word circus is a singular noun. You would use the third-person singular pronoun: it.
I saw an elephant in a tutu at the circus.
circus ,clowns, seat, chairs, and children
"I don't believe that that the circus has the worlds rarest gem and the country's fattest lady" Said Mary sceptically.