The truck drove to Edward's garage. This sentence is strange, since it implies that the truck drove itself to Edward's garage without any assistance, such as a driver. Nevertheless, "truck" is the subject of the sentence, and "drove" is the verb.
big
They should cover it since it is not your property. It may be chepaer buying a new garage door then the 6 year increase to your premium
Drove is a noun and a verb (past tense of drive).
No, the word 'drove' is a noun, a word for a flock or herd of animals driven as a group; a word for a large group of people in motion; a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'drove' is it.Example: A drove of gees followed behind the girl. She led it to the pasture by the pond.The word 'drove' is also the past tense of the verb to drive.
Mark Martin,
Technically, all you need to make a sentence is a subject and a verb, "She drove." But it also makes sense to put in a direct object, "She drove Madison".
Drove and Stopped are the verbs in that sentence.
The latter sentence is correct: "You drove past his house."
subject (noun or pronoun) + predicate (verb) examples: Bob drove. Stop! ("You" is implied.)
Verbs are the words that tell what the subject is or is doing.Adverbs are the words that modify (give more information about) a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Adjectives are the words that describe nouns.Nouns are the words for a person, a place, or a thing.A sentence is a group of words that convey a complete thought. A sentence requires a subject and a verb, but a sentence can have many parts.A subject (the person or thing that the sentence is about) can be a noun or a pronoun.Examples:Jack drove. (the noun 'Jack' is the subject, the sentence is about him; the verb is 'drove', what he did)Jack drove today. (the adverb 'today' gives more information about the verb)Jack drove home. (the noun 'home' is the direct object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove too fast. (the adjective 'fast' describes how he drove; the adverb 'too' gives more information about the adjective)Jack drove a car. (the noun 'car' is the object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove a new car. (the adjective 'new' describes the car)
In English composition, a 'clear sentence' states one main thought with subject, verb and potentially an object and clauses.A clear sentence can be as simple as:I drove to work.A more complicated but clear sentence might be:Because it was raining, I drove to work rather than riding my bike.
It is active voice, because the mother is the subject of the sentence and is carrying out the action, which the verb to drive.
There are five nouns:JohnTucsonspeechsubjectdemocracyNote: There should be a comma after the noun subject: ...his favorite subject, democracy.
"You drove past his house" is correct.
The Car. A simple subject is the who or what that is doing the verb without any description. So I am pretty sure it is the car.
'We drove to the sports center.' Or: 'We drove there.'
In parts of speech, "simple" is an adjective and "sentence" can be used as a noun and a verb.In grammar, a simple sentence is one that contains a subject and a predicate and forms a complete thought. Example: Sasha drove to school today.