A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
Simple sentence
No. Every sentence requires a predicate (a verb or action word) and this phrase does not contain a predicate.
He agrees with you. Or he is in agreement with you.
Yes. Best to keep the verb agreement, if possible.
As long as you need it to be! There is no magic formula for telling how long your sentences should be.Write a correct English sentence with a subject and a predicate, give it correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation, and that is how long it is supposed to be!
Maybe. If the example you give is the entire sentence, then it is not correct: the verb should be plural to agree with the plural subject " two sons." But if the subject is "All that is left...." then the predicate "is two sons" is correct.
A simple sentence.
No. The predicate of the sentence is objective and, therefore, the correct pronoun would be 'me'.
A complete and correct sentence requires a subject and a predicate.
No. Every sentence requires a predicate (a verb or action word) and this phrase does not contain a predicate.
The correct subject complement for this sentence is "verse masterpiece."
Yes, it can be buts it's not the correct name for it. If writing a paper, use predicate.
This is a phrase, not a sentence. It lacks any sort of verb or predicate to qualify it as a sentence.
Yes, this is correct grammar. "Her parents" is the subject. "are Nigerian" is the predicate. (Specifically, "are" is a linking verb, resulting the sentence taking on a passive tone. Nigerian can be a predicate noun or a predicate adjective, depending on how you are using it.)
It is not actually a sentence. It is a complete subject with no predicate. A sentence would be "This is an example of what love is supposed to be."
Yes, He's dizzy (He is dizzy) is a correct sentence. He is the subject, is is the verb (linking), and dizzy is a predicate adjective.
It is correct.
The corrected sentence should have verb-subject agreement as well as pronoun-antecedent agreement with no misplaced modifiers to be grammatically right.