The subject in the sentence "Hi, my name is Paul; are you the new student?" is "I," which is implied in the phrase "my name is Paul." In the second part of the sentence, "you" serves as the subject in the question "are you the new student?"
Paul Walker's real name is Paul Walker.
Paul Dresser's birth name is Dreiser, Paul.
Paul Bunnell's birth name is Paul Mack.
Paul Kerensa's birth name is Paul Young.
Been Dating Jasmine Pilchard Gosnel For 7 Years Now With The Age Gap of 17 years she only was 16 when they started dating but they were on and off no body really knows what was the state of their current relationship but there's a video of her crashing infront of Paul's santa barbara house on dec 4th..she is a college student now..and not really pretty dont know what paul was thinking
Paul D. Knott has written: 'Student activism [compiled by] Paul D. Knott' -- subject(s): Student movements, United States
Paul Norbert Meyer has written: 'The evolution of a student-oriented contingency management system in a university classroom' -- subject(s): Student evaluation of curriculum
Did Paul go to college? (Paul did go to college)Did - auxiliary verb;Paul - proper noun, subject of the sentence;go - main verb;to - preposition;college - noun, object of the preposition 'to'.
Paul Atkins has written: 'The college daily in the United States' -- subject(s): College student newspapers and periodicals
Paul I. Hettich has written: 'Learning skills for college and career' -- subject(s): College student orientation, Study skills
The pronouns in the sentence "May Paul go with you?" are "Paul" (a proper noun functioning as a subject) and "you" (a second-person pronoun). "You" refers to the person being addressed, while "Paul" is the person being discussed. There are no other pronouns in this sentence.
The name of the graduate linguistics student who studied Genie, the wild child, was Susan Curtiss.
The correct phrase is "Paul and I are going to a concert." When using pronouns in a compound subject, you should use the subject pronoun "I" instead of the object pronoun "me." A simple way to remember this is to remove the other person's name and check if the sentence still sounds correct: "I am going to a concert" is correct, while "me am going to a concert" is not.
Paul M. Fischer has written: 'Student companion book to accompany advanced accounting, 8E' 'Advanced Accounting - Textbook Only' 'Student companion book to accompany Advanced accounting, 8e' -- subject(s): Accounting 'Advanced accounting' -- subject(s): Accounting 'Cost accounting' -- subject(s): Cost accounting 'Fundamentals of advanced accounting' -- subject(s): Accounting
Paul Mower has written: 'What's in a name?' -- subject(s): Lloyd's of London
The pronoun is the sentence is you. The pronoun takes the place of the name of the person spoken to (second person).
Paul J. Hopper has written: 'The syntax of the simple sentence in proto-germanic' -- subject(s): Proto-Germanic language, Syntax, Sentences