Firstly correcting the grammar - it should say "Clark ran well for a person who's thirty pounds overweight." "Well" is an adverb, qualifying the verb "ran." "who's thirty pounds overwight" is an adjectival phrase, qualifying "a person."
Not necessarily. In the English language, the only part of speech that must be present in a sentence is a verb; a sentence such as 'Sit.' contains only a verb, but it makes logical sense.A sentence that does not have a subject and predicate is called a minor sentence. Minor sentences have what is sometimes known as an invisible subject; that is, the subject is not present in the sentence, but still exists.For example, in the sentence 'Sit.', the subject is 'You', as that is the person being told to sit; the subject is not present in the sentence, however, and is therefore an invisible subject.
The person, place, or thing that the sentence is about is the subject.The subject of the sentence performs the action.
This is not a right sentence, She has a bad cold this morning. I have(First person) You Have(Second person) She/He Has(Third person)
Meaning "looking down on" or "holding in disregard," the adjectival term "patronizing" has many uses in contemporary English. One example-sentence for it is as follows: "She refused to stay for the rest of the meeting, explaining later that the patronizing attitude of the speaker was too much to take. "
The subject is often near the start of a sentence: it is the thing or person that the sentence is about, and for an action verb, it is the thing or person performing the action. The verb is the action or state described in the sentence: what the subject does or is.
"What" can be used as an adjectival when it is used to describe a noun or pronoun. For example, in the phrase "What time is it?", "what" is describing the noun "time."
The overweight person have got the same amount of blood. That is five liters in his body. Overweight person has got extra fat in his body, some times extra muscles.
The difference between an obese person and an overweight person is that an overweight person usually weighs less than an obese person but still needs to lose weight usually somewhere between 20-40lbs of weight.
yes if they wanted to
As a noun, the term "patrician", meaning "noble person" or "aristocrat" (although "privileged" and other adjectival meanings are also possible), may be utilized in quite a few ways in a sentence. One example would be the following: "In ancient Rome, the typical patrician not only expected the best; he or she would demand it."
Having been ball shaped and nearly immobile, yes. An overweight person can drown in the same way as anyone else.
Practically speaking a metal chair is a lot better for an overweight person than a wooden one because metal chairs is more able to support the overweight person than a wooden one.
There are a few positive connotations of being overweight. One is that the person knows how to cook for their family.
sugar, overweight
When a person is 45kg (99.2lb) overweight.
Typically, yes. An overweight body will draw from the fat source in the body, a skinny person is not likely to have much fat to survive off of.
Overweight