it is a statement
2 or 3 words that are the subject of the sentence: Jack and his dog ran through the woods. - Jack and his dog = subject phrase Jack ran through the woods. - Jack = single pronoun subject.
The phrase "ran to catch the bus" contains no subject.Examples of complete sentences:He ran to catch the bus.Mrs. Jones ran to catch the bus.The kids ran to catch the bus.All sentences need:a subject (this is a person place or thing that does the actiona verb (an action)The original phrase does not say who or what did the running.
Ran is the verb in that sentence>
Yes, "She ran." is a complete sentence because it has a subject and a verb.
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "ran to the bus stop after the movie".The subject is the noun phrase "the children".Note: The preposition phrase "After the movie" modifies the verb "ran".
Yes, you can use an adjective and adverb in the same sentence. For example: "She quickly ran to the bus stop." In this sentence, "quickly" is the adverb describing how she ran, and "bus stop" is the adjective describing the type of stop.
"up the hill"
The noun 'bus' is used as the subject of a sentence or clause, and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject of the sentence: The school bus is yellow.subject of the clause: A bus that ran a red lighthit a pole.object of the verb: Did I miss the bus?object of the preposition: I hate to be late for the bus.
2 or 3 words that are the subject of the sentence: Jack and his dog ran through the woods. - Jack and his dog = subject phrase Jack ran through the woods. - Jack = single pronoun subject.
The phrase "ran to catch the bus" contains no subject.Examples of complete sentences:He ran to catch the bus.Mrs. Jones ran to catch the bus.The kids ran to catch the bus.All sentences need:a subject (this is a person place or thing that does the actiona verb (an action)The original phrase does not say who or what did the running.
I ran quickly, I didn't want to miss the bus.
Jack and Jill ran to the station as they didn't want to miss their train.
My mother is a frequent visitor to the mall.
No. The word "he" is a pronoun. The antecedent would be the word that "he" referred to, as in the sentence "Bob dropped the book as he ran for the bus" where "he" refers to Bob.
Ran is the verb in that sentence>
This sentence is a complex sentence because it contains one independent clause ("The officer ran into the house") and one dependent clause ("where the fugitive was hidden"). The dependent clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.