fast ball
Red is an adjective. An adjective is a describing word, in the sentence "He threw the round and red ball and it hit the little chubby boy in his face" the words red, round, little, and chubby are all adjectives.
A verb is the active part of the sentence, and tells what is being done or what characteristic is observed. A noun is a name word, and may be the subject of a sentence, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition. An adjective is a describing word, that tells something about a noun or pronoun; either identifying it or something. --- You can define each of the words in a sentence by its part of speech, and by the role it plays in the sentence. The boy kicked the red ball quickly. [the boy - complete subject] [kicked the red ball quickly - complete predicate] the - article (determiner) boy - noun - simple subject kicked - verb - simple predicate the - article red - adjective, modifies ball ball - noun - direct object quickly - adverb, modifies hit a. verb : kicked b. noun: boy, ball c. adjective: red
The boy was hit on the head from the repercussion of the ball after it hit the wall.
The predicate adjective is "popular". It follows the linking verb "was".
In a sentence written in the active voice, the subject is the agent that is "doing the verb". Example:Bob hit the ball. Bob is the subject. In a sentence written in the passive voice, the subject is thing affected by the verb. Example: The ball was hit by Bob. The ball is the subject.
Red is an adjective. An adjective is a describing word, in the sentence "He threw the round and red ball and it hit the little chubby boy in his face" the words red, round, little, and chubby are all adjectives.
The word "hit" is a transitive verb in a sentence, as it requires an object to complete its meaning. In the sentence "She hit the ball," "the ball" is the object that is being directly affected by the action of hitting.
The ball was hit by Bob yesterday. Yesterday the ball was hit by Bob. You can put yesterday at the beginning or end of the sentence.
Not necessarily, the subject of a sentence is who or whatthe sentence is about:The bird sat on Mary's hair. (In this sentence, the subject is 'bird' not Mary. The sentence is about what the bird did.)The ball hit the garage window and smashed it. (In this sentence, the subject is 'ball' and what happened with it; there is no person in this sentence and it doesn't need one.)Mario hit the ball. (In this sentence, the person, 'Mario" is the subject.)
Yes because if you hit the top of the ball it won't go very fast, but if you hit the bottom or the middle if the ball it will go faster.
Yes, hit and mile. No one can really hit a ball a mile away.
A verb is the active part of the sentence, and tells what is being done or what characteristic is observed. A noun is a name word, and may be the subject of a sentence, the object of a verb, or the object of a preposition. An adjective is a describing word, that tells something about a noun or pronoun; either identifying it or something. --- You can define each of the words in a sentence by its part of speech, and by the role it plays in the sentence. The boy kicked the red ball quickly. [the boy - complete subject] [kicked the red ball quickly - complete predicate] the - article (determiner) boy - noun - simple subject kicked - verb - simple predicate the - article red - adjective, modifies ball ball - noun - direct object quickly - adverb, modifies hit a. verb : kicked b. noun: boy, ball c. adjective: red
The boy was hit on the head from the repercussion of the ball after it hit the wall.
Hercules did
It depends on how hard you hit the ball.
will probably hit
He hit the ball in the outfield in the championship game