Compound Subject
This is a compound sentence, as it consists of two independent clauses joined by the coordinating conjunction "and."
The words 'Yesterday Nick visited and old village' is NOT a grammatically correct sentence for two reasons. First, the word 'and' is a connecting word to make a compound subject, compound verb, or compound sentence. Instead of 'and' in your sentence, you need one of three words: a, an, or the. Those three words are called articles of speech and come before nouns. Second, you need a comma after Yesterday. Note: you use 'an' before words beginning with a vowel.So the sentence should read:Yesterday, Nick visited an old village. (or the old village)Yesterday is an adverb.Nick is the nounan old village is the object phrasean is an articleold is an adjective modifying villagevillage is the object.You can also write the sentence: Nick visited an old village yesterday.
Okay. "Los Angeles, Ca; Tokyo, Japan; Hong Kong, China; Sydney, Australia." "She missed work three times in a row; her boss fired her." "I miss my friends; they all moved away."
That's called an ellipsis.
No it is always three separate words.
three lucky families
a three day vacation is too brief for me
We all looked forward to vacation in Hawaii. But in the end, three of us came down with the flu and we didn't go.
An insect is a class of small arthropod animals that has three separate sections to their bodies;head,thorax,abdomen. (Is a sentence) -Sydney C. ♥
compound, complex, and simple. I know this may sound like sentence types, but it is the same.
This is a compound sentence, as it consists of two independent clauses joined by the coordinating conjunction "and."
Compound adjectives are formed when you use two or more adjectives that are joined together with a hyphen to modify the same noun. She had a three-year-old cat is an example of a compound adjective in a sentence.
SYD is the three digit IATA code for Sydney Australia.
No, that's not a run-on sentence. Technically, it's a simple sentence with a compound verb. It contains a single subject and three verbs. "You" is the subject of the sentence. The three verbs are "went," "ate" and "ate." In other words, there is one person doing three actions. Admittedly, it's not a very goodsentence, but it is grammatically correct.
Simple, compound, complex
Yes, twenty-three is a compound word.
Three