many large paintings
Many large paintings hung on the walls. You are talking about "paintings", the subject. "Many large" are descriptive words of paintings. The paintings "hung"-- the word of the action for the paintings. Many large and on the walls--Those are the words confusing you. Step back from wordy or complicated sentences and try to simplify them that way.
The predicate of a sentence is everything except the subject. Here the subject is a large grey cat. So therefore the predicate is jumped on top of the brick wall.
Park. Just think of the first (and /or most basic) noun in the sentence.
Expressionism
There is a large population of animals in this world.
The complete subject of the sentence is "a large collection of music manuscript." It includes the article "a" along with the descriptive phrase "of music manuscript," which specifies the type of collection.
Many large paintings hung on the walls. You are talking about "paintings", the subject. "Many large" are descriptive words of paintings. The paintings "hung"-- the word of the action for the paintings. Many large and on the walls--Those are the words confusing you. Step back from wordy or complicated sentences and try to simplify them that way.
No, it's a fragment. To make it a complete sentence you need to add what the challenges of supporting a large family are.
The predicate of a sentence is everything except the subject. Here the subject is a large grey cat. So therefore the predicate is jumped on top of the brick wall.
Large is an adjective. In this sentence it is describing the noun fish and is part of the subject (large fish) of the sentence.
An Eagle is the subject
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
The subject of the sentence is cow (cow was grazing).
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
park is
large rocks
A sentence requires a subject and predicate. That means a noun and a verb that are in agreement with one another (in terms of singular and plural). A phrase is not a complete sentence. It is a little group of words that go together and function together in some way.Here is a very short but complete sentence:She laughs.You have a subject (a pronoun, which stands "for" ["pro"] a noun) and a verb that agrees with it--that is, both are singular.Here is a very long phrase that is not a complete sentence. This happens to be a prepositional phrase because it begins with a preposition ("in") and ends with the object of the preposition (the noun "house"). All the rest is description of the noun at the end.in the large, ramshackle, isolated, abandoned, and allegedly haunted house(You would not really write like this, we hope, but it would be a correct and grammatical phrase if you did.)If you have a subject and a verb that make a complete sentence, you can't call it a phrase. If all you have is a phrase, you don't have a sentence.