S.E. Hinton
My stomach rumbled loudly, reminding me I hadn't eaten breakfast.
The author Avi is the one who wrote "What do fish have to do with anything?"
Bumbled. Tumbled. Rumbled. Jumbled. Mumbled. Et cetera.
Amy Tan wrote Saving Fish from Drowning.
"Rumbled" is a verb because it is an action word that describes the sound or movement made by something. It conveys the action of a deep, low, and continuous sound or the act of moving with a low, rumbling noise.
You wrote it yourself -it's a FISH
The Amazing Fish by Christine Price.
The simple subject in the sentence "from somewhere in the middle of the crowd rumbled a spontaneous demonstration" is "demonstration." The phrase "from somewhere in the middle of the crowd" serves as a prepositional phrase that provides context but does not affect the subject of the sentence. The verb "rumbled" describes the action related to the subject.
This sentence doesn't have s+v+O word order so it is not easy to pick the s+v. If you rewrite the sentence:A spontaneous demonstration rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.The verb is rumbled, so ask your self - what rumbled? - and the answer is "A spontaneous demonstration". If the subject is a noun phrase then the simple subject is just the noun. In this case the noun is demonstration.Probably the word order of the sentence is changed for effect.
bested bed sheet
[A spontaneous demonstration] rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.Note: In this sentence the noun "demonstration" is the simple subject. This is arrived at by asking the verb rumbled a "what" question. Here though the words "a" and "spontaneous" do modify the simple subject and are properly treated as a part of the full subject in general.
[A spontaneous demonstration] rumbled from somewhere in the middle of the crowd.Note: In this sentence the noun "demonstration" is the simple subject. This is arrived at by asking the verb rumbled a "what" question. Here though the words "a" and "spontaneous" do modify the simple subject and are properly treated as a part of the full subject in general.