teacher
Speak is a verb. Speaks is the third person singular form of speak. We use speaks when the subject is singular. egHe speaks to the teacher like that all the time. -- singular subject = heThey speak to the teacher like that all the time -- plural subject = they
No, "leaves" is not a predicate nominative. A predicate nominative is a noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb and renames or identifies the subject of the sentence. For example, in the sentence "She is a teacher," "teacher" is the predicate nominative. "Leaves" typically functions as a noun referring to plant structures or as a verb meaning to depart, depending on the context.
Teachers
Forrest was not a teacher, Rich Franklin was.
Sifu mean's teacher which some schools call master Si-gung mean's grandmaster, witch is your sifu's teacher Tai-si-gung is your si-gung's teacher For female teachers sifu=teacher si-poo=grandmaster sifu's teacher tai-si-poo= great grandmaster si-poo's teacher
she was a teacher in Mississippi before she became a wellknown journalist.
Bob is batting balls. Subject: Bob Linking verb: is Noun: balls
Teacher is the simple subject.
The complete subject is "The chemistry teacher", "at your school" acts as a qualifier.
The teacher introduced a new topic in class today that sparked a lot of interesting discussions among the students.
The complete subject of the sentence is the noun phrase:"The new chemistry teacher at your school..."The simple subject is: teacher.
The complete subject of the sentence is the noun phrase 'The teacher'.
"The new chemistry teacher at your school is my friend's cousin?" Some people would say the complete subject to be "Chemistry teacher" or "new chemistry teacher", but it's not. The complete subject is just "teacher". "Chemistry" and "new" are both adjectives.
"The new chemistry teacher at your school is my friend's cousin?" Some people would say the complete subject to be "Chemistry teacher" or "new chemistry teacher", but it's not. The complete subject is just "teacher". "Chemistry" and "new" are both adjectives.
no favoritism.
the new chemistry teacher at your schoolis the real answer A+
Nothing - simply that a 'computer teacher' specialises in one subject.