yes
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
Hibiscus leaves are simple, not compound. Each leaf is typically made up of a single blade attached to the stem, without leaflets or additional subdivisions.
Well a compound sentences is 2 simple sentences put together as one sentence by putting a connective inbetween. Examples: 2 simple sentences: I went to the shop. I bought an apple a connective: and/but/however/although Sentence together: I went to the shop and I bought an apple. So in a compound sentence you need atleast 2 simple sentences and a connective.
The peepal leaf is simple, meaning it is undivided and consists of a single leaf blade attached to the stem.
The simple subject in this sentence is "cave," as it is the noun that the rest of the sentence is about.
it is compound sentence
Compound simple
A simple sentence is a sentence, for example: I played a game. And a compound sentence is I played game and I ate my food.
This sentence is a simple sentence because it contains only one independent clause.
compound
Simple sentence, compound sentence, complex sentence and compound complex sentence.
compound sentence, simple sentence, and complex sentence
nothing
Yes, it is possible to use a compound subject in a simple sentence. A compound subject consists of two or more subjects that are connected by a coordinating conjunction such as "and" or "or." For example, "Sara and Emma went to the park" is a simple sentence with a compound subject "Sara and Emma."
simple
simple, compound, complex, compound-complex
If you are talking about predicates it is simple. If you are talking about subjects it is compound.