several tents is the complete subject. tents is the simple subject
the simple subject is tents. the complete subject is several tents.
the complete subject is several tents. the simple subject it tents
Park. Just think of the first (and /or most basic) noun in the sentence.
subject = dog verb = ran
A COMPLETE SENTENCE:1. HAS A SUBJECT2. HAS A VERB3. MAKES COMPLETE SENSE4. CAPITAL LETTER AT THE BEGINING5. AND PUNCTUATION .AnswerComplete sentences have (at least) a noun and a verb. Teachers often ask for "complete" sentences when you are answering questions. This makes it easier on them, because they don't have to have the question list in front of them to understand your answers. For instance, if the teacher asked "What was Shakespeare's first name, and when was he born?" and your answer was "William, 1564," then you would have an INCOMPLETE sentence. There is no verb in that answer. So, you would have to mimic the question, like this: Shakespeare's first name was William, and he was born in 1564.Or, you could answer in a complete sentence like this:William Shakespeare was born in 1564.Either way, make sure you have a noun and a verb in your sentence. "Bob walked" can be a sentence all by itself... just include who is doing something, and what they are doing.AnswerA sentence is a related group of words containing a subject and a predicate and expressing a complete thought. Some authorities add the requirement that the first letter of the sentence must be capitalized and the sentence must end with a full stop (period, question mark, or exclamation point). Anything less than this is not a complete sentence.
"You" is the subject. What did you do? you met. "Met" is the verb. "at the park" is a prepositional phrase (where did you meet?). You met to do what? You met to run. So "to run" becomes the direct object of the sentence.
The nouns in the sentence are: park and people.
the complete subject is several tents. the simple subject it tents
For a sentence to be complete, it must have a subject and a verb. Giving the incomplete sentence the missing parts will make it complete.For example:"Went to the park" can be made complete by adding a subject to make it "We went to the park""It blue" can be made complete by adding a verb to make it "It is blue""The moon tonight" can be made complete by adding a subject and a verb to make it "I looked at the moon tonight"
No. "Your first game is at the minute maid park" is a complete sentence.
Park. Just think of the first (and /or most basic) noun in the sentence.
park is
Park
subject = dog verb = ran
"Characters in south park" is not a question nor is it a complete sentence, therefore it cannot be answered.
"Girls in south park" is not a question nor is it a complete sentence, therefore it cannot be answered.
Strolling in the park on a summer afternoon is very delightful is. but yours is not.
A dependent clause is agroup of words that contains a subject and verb but does not express a complete thought. It can not be a sentence. Often marked by a dependent marker.EX:When Jim studied the amusement park for his chemisrty quiz....(DC)
You. It is not stated but implied - Don't you feed any bear in the park.