Yes, since it has a subject, "Everyone," and a predicate, "had".
The sentence "Everyone laughed after the actor tripped" contains a subordinate (or dependent) clause: "after the actor tripped." This clause provides additional information about the timing of the laughter but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence. The main clause is "Everyone laughed," which expresses the primary action.
Fun is an adjective in this sentence because it does not tell how was which was or where was.
'Everyone in our school' is the complete subject.Everyone in our school
No, a complete sentence needs a subject and verb at least.
a sentence with an adjective and a conj is : soccer is fun but skiing is not. in this case fun is the adj and but is the conj
Yes- there is a subject (Everyone) and a predicate (had fun).
No it is not a complete sentence on its own. It is because there should be something before Therefore.
The complete predicate of the sentence "Everyone in our school is wearing uniforms this year" is "is wearing uniforms this year." This part of the sentence provides information about what everyone in the school is doing. It includes the verb "is wearing" and the details of the action.
Complete subject: Everyone in the church Complete predicate: . . . rushed out into the freezing night air.
The complete predicate in the sentence "Everyone in our school is wearing uniforms this year" is "is wearing uniforms this year." It includes the verb "is wearing" and all the information that follows, describing what everyone in the school is doing.
There is no verb in this sentence. There should be a verb after everyone eg Everyone sat around ....................... Everyone gathered around ..............
It, because is is a verb
No, the correct grammar would be "how fun it is." "How fun" is typically used as an interjection or exclamation rather than a complete sentence on its own.
No. The sentence you are needing is "I think English is fun to learn" or "I think learning English is fun".
The sentence "Everyone laughed after the actor tripped" contains a subordinate (or dependent) clause: "after the actor tripped." This clause provides additional information about the timing of the laughter but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence. The main clause is "Everyone laughed," which expresses the primary action.
Fun is an adjective in this sentence because it does not tell how was which was or where was.
'Everyone in our school' is the complete subject.Everyone in our school