lisa
Lisa wants to go quickly.
Lisa gives John ten cents to copy one paper.
The little boy was carelessly musing down the street.
No, green describes something- it is an adjective. eg. The green coat. Here, the word "green" is describing the coat. A pronoun is a word that can replace a noun (ie. "Lisa" becomes "she") "Lisa gave the coat to Phil." All three nouns in the sentence can be replaced by pronouns "She gave it to him."
It's hard to see because an appositive should be set off by commas. The sentence should be, 'Lisa must meet your brother, Richard, before he goes to college in the fall.'The appositive is the noun Richard, which restates the noun 'brother'.
Lisa
A complete predicate is the end of a sentence after a verb including the verb. Example: Lisa walked her dog. Walked her dog is the complete predicate.
A complete predicate is the end of a sentence after a verb including the verb. Example: Lisa walked her dog. Walked her dog is the complete predicate.
Lisa and Kathy went to Starbucks this morning. Lisa and Kathy is the compound subject because there is more than one subject that applies to the predicate.
Lisa was put on suspension from school after she was caught cheating on a test.
The complete subject in the sentence is "Lisa".
The word "Lisa's" is the possessive form of the proper noun "Lisa".A possessive noun is formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the noun. The possessive form of the noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to Lisa.Example:I have Lisa's phone number. (the phone number of Lisa)I went to school with Lisa's sister. (the sister of Lisa)
No, a complete sentence must have both a subject and a predicate. The subject is the part of the sentence that performs the action, while the predicate includes the verb and expresses what the subject is doing.
Lisa Simpson attends Springfield Elementary School.
This is a declarative sentence, as it makes a statement about Lisa's lunch preference.
Yes.
She didn't. She dropped out of high school.