Yes.
It is one of those sentences with an implied subject, which is why it can be confusing. But if you are telling someone to do something, and say "read this" or "read that." ... it is still a sentence, even though you don't say "you, read that," or "Sally, read that."
If you are talking about yourself though, you need to add the "I." So... "I read a joke in a book" is correct. It is only correct without a subject if you are instructing someone else about what to do.
Read a book. It is a command. 'You' is implied.
The subject of this sentence is the book.The answer is either book or Exodus???
The book was well read, its cover was very worn.
It is a compound sentence. Janet did two actions. She read and she reported.
You can create a sentence like this: "As I sat by the river, I watched the reeds sway in the breeze while I read my favorite book." This sentence effectively uses both "reed" and "read" in a natural context.
bobo
Read a book. It is a command. 'You' is implied.
i read a book
Er ... this is a joke question right? You read books.
I read the book.
There are two nouns in the sentence: Katie and book.
No, the sentence "You read the book" contains the transitive verb "read." A transitive verb is a verb that requires a direct object to complete its meaning, which is the case in this sentence where the direct object is "the book."
Did you read the preface of the book?
The book i have been reading it seen last week but it good and it super funny to it doesn't have that may joke but i recommended to read this book.
The subject of this sentence is the book.The answer is either book or Exodus???
An object sentence typically refers to a sentence structure where the subject performs an action on the object. For example, "She read a book." In this sentence, "She" is the subject, "read" is the action, and "a book" is the object of the action.
The only noun in the sentence is book.