The plane. Note it should be plane not planes.
When you add an -s to a verb then the subject should be singular ie plane not planes
The plane
pile :)
the simple subject of a sentence is what the sentence is in one word
The simple subject of the sentence in the question is brother.
A simple subject and simple predicate are the two main parts of each sentence. A simple subject is the common pronoun, noun, or proper noun that tells who the sentence is about. A simple predicate is the verb in the sentence that acts on the subject.
A simple subject is what or whom the sentence is about, the main noun. A simple predicate is the action the subject is doing in the sentence, a verb. These are simple, not associated with the compound subject or compound predicate, which are inverse to these. SO:Sentence: The old dog loafs by the fire.Simple subject: dogSimple predicate: loafs
The simple subject in the sentence is "plane."
planes
The plane.
Plane.
Plane.
pile :)
The simple subject of the sentence is "you".
The plane.
A simple subject is a thing. If it were talking about a Baseball or a sentence the baseball is the simple subject.
the simple subject of a sentence is what the sentence is in one word
Yes, a pronoun can be a simple subject in a sentence. A simple subject is the main noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, and it can be a pronoun like "he," "she," "it," or "they."
"They" is the subject of that sentence.