The subject noun is maid.
A (adjective) selection (subject) of (preposition) cheeses (object of preposition) served (verb) with (preposition) grapes (object of preposition). For starters, 'A selection of cheeses served with grapes' is not a sentence, it is a phrase. A sentence requires a subject and a verb. While the word 'SERVED' is usually a verb, in this case it is being used to describe the cheeses, it does not indicate any action taking place. What happened with the selection of cheeses and grapes? If the phrase were rewritten: 'A selection of cheeses WAS served with grapes', then you would have an action. A selection of cheeses- is the subject of the sentence. was served- is the verb in the sentence, WAS is an auxiliary verb. with grapes - A prepositional phrase modifying the subject. - wjs1632 -
I served dinner to everyone in my family yesterday
A noun clause is a group of words containing a subject and its verb but is not a complete sentence. A noun clause takes the place of a noun and cannot stand on its own.The noun clause is whatever is served.The noun clause is the direct object of the verb 'will eat'.
The rock music served only to sidetrack me from my work.
No. What you have described is a concurrent sentence (concurrent means at the same time). A consecutive sentence is served after another one (consecutive means following on).
A (adjective) selection (subject) of (preposition) cheeses (object of preposition) served (verb) with (preposition) grapes (object of preposition). For starters, 'A selection of cheeses served with grapes' is not a sentence, it is a phrase. A sentence requires a subject and a verb. While the word 'SERVED' is usually a verb, in this case it is being used to describe the cheeses, it does not indicate any action taking place. What happened with the selection of cheeses and grapes? If the phrase were rewritten: 'A selection of cheeses WAS served with grapes', then you would have an action. A selection of cheeses- is the subject of the sentence. was served- is the verb in the sentence, WAS is an auxiliary verb. with grapes - A prepositional phrase modifying the subject. - wjs1632 -
In grammar, the subject is the person, thing, or entity that is performing the action or being described by the verb in a sentence. It is typically located at the beginning of a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is about.
Tamara and Janet
Sentence A, "Shelly served dinner after spending hours preparing a meal," demonstrates a subject-verb modifier pattern. The subject "Shelly" is followed by the verb "served," and the modifier "after spending hours preparing a meal" provides additional information about the action.
The word 'lunch' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'lunch' functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Lunch is ready. (subject of the sentence)The time that lunch is served is very early. (subject of the relative clause)
The nouns in the sentence are:sailors, subject of the sentencesalami, attributive (describes sandwiches)sandwiches, direct objectsoldiers, object of the preposition 'to'
He served in Parliament.
I served dinner to everyone in my family yesterday
If a person dies while serving a life sentence, the sentence is typically considered to have been served, as the individual is no longer alive to continue serving it.
A palatable French dish was served to the guest.
Cake and program are the nouns in that sentence.
The conditional release of prisoners before they have served their full sentence is called parole. This allows a prisoner to serve the remainder of their sentence in the community under supervision.