His drowsy, ditsy dog was asleep.
'My dog and I' if this is the subject of the sentence or clause; 'My dog and me' if this is the object of the sentence or clause. Examples:My dog and I ran home when the rain started.My neighbor and her dog often walk with my dog and me.
Find the owner. The owner may be singular or plural. Put the apostrophe straight after the owner. If the owner is singular, then add an S.For example: the dogs breakfast. Who owned the breakfast? If it was the (one) dog, then write the owner (the dog), add the apostrophe AFTER it (the dog') and then put an s after that (the dog's). Correct sentence: "I made the dog's breakfast."If the owner of the breakfast was several dogs, then write the plural owner (the dogs), then add the apostrophe AFTER it (the dogs'). You don't need another S. Correct sentence: "I made the dogs' breakfast."Other examples:After breakfast I made the children's beds. (several children)After lunch I painted the dog's kennel. (one dog).After school I went to the teachers' office. (several teachers)After school I went to the principal's office. (one principal)There is an exception: If a singular owner ends in an S, you usually do NOT add another S after the apostrophe (Mr Jones' car. Jesus' teachings. James' hat.)
"The boy chased the dog" is a complete sentence. The verb, chased, is transitive. The object is "dog".
A dog howled loudly all night is a sentence.
The dog is the direct object in that sentence.
No. No need for a coma with this sentence. You forgot some ' though. Should be-Mervin's dog wags it's tail when it gets a bone.
Sentence is misspelled first off. Your sentence: I like to run with my dog in the field he's got a pretty coat? This is a run on sentence. You should put a period after field. "I like to run with my dog in the field." This is a complete sentence. In the next part you add: "He's got a pretty coat." This is another subject and so should be included in another sentence. The subject in the first sentence is running with the dog, in the second sentence the subject is the dog's pretty coat.
Yes, your dog can have ADD
No, alliteration is when you have three of the same words starting with the first word you have. - (Rough Winds Do Shake The Buds Of May) Do you see any words in a row with the same letters? No, therefore it is not an alliteration. Example: The dog drank daintly from the red water bowl. (Dog Drank Daintly) - Alliteration.
with a Nintendo Ds lite
Does Dave's dog dig deep divets? ur awnser no
Put her/him asleep.
the dog
Yes, a dog is a subject if your talking to someone about your dog, the dog would be the subject you are talking about.
'There is a dog' is the complete subject of the sentence. It consists of the subject 'dog' and the linking verb 'is'.
'My dog and I' if this is the subject of the sentence or clause; 'My dog and me' if this is the object of the sentence or clause. Examples:My dog and I ran home when the rain started.My neighbor and her dog often walk with my dog and me.
'My dog and I' if this is the subject of the sentence or clause; 'My dog and me' if this is the object of the sentence or clause. Examples:My dog and I ran home when the rain started.My neighbor and her dog often walk with my dog and me.