Spanish: Yo (veo) (reír) a la niña
English: I (see) the girl (laugh)
Two negative modifiers used with the verb of a sentence are "not" and "never." These words modify the verb to create a negative meaning in the sentence.
The verb in the sentence is "are." It is a form of the verb "to be" indicating the existence or presence of something.
The two basic part of a sentence are the subject and verb (predicate).
no. a sentence needs a subject/obect and a verb
The term 'found out' is not a noun.The term 'found out' is a verb phrase; a verb (found) adverb (out) combination.Example sentence: We found out the best way to do it by trial and error.
Are is the verb. Cassettes is the subject.
A subject is a sentence with a noun in it. So you would have two nouns in that sentence. A verb is an action word. So a sentence with two subjects and one verb must include two nouns and one action word. for example: Sally and Ikicked a ball. Sally and the word I are the nouns. (a noun is a person,place,thing, or an idea)The verb of this sentence would be kicked. I think a sentence with two subjects and one verb is called a compound sentence. I hope this answered your question!
Venir is a regular and stem-changing verb in Spanish.
Subject and verb are two important parts of a sentence. The subject is the person or thing that the sentence is about, and the verb is the action that the subject is doing. Together, they form the basic structure of a sentence.
You need a subject and a verb
A sentence with a compound subject.Bob and I went to the movies. Bob and I is the compound subject, went is the verb.
The two words "will build" comprise the verb in this sentence.