Yes it can.
No, a sentence can only have one simple subject, which is the main noun or pronoun that the sentence is about. Additional nouns or pronouns in a sentence would typically be part of a compound subject.
"Belief or herders" is not a sentence. It is two nouns.
Nouns: "The cat" Pronouns: "He"
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
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.
The sentence given is a compound sentence, with two independent clauses. For the first clause, the simple subject is "you" and the simple predicate is "respect"; for the second clause, the simple subject is "commotion" and the simple predicate is "is".
Yes. This is fairly common in proper nouns, such as United States, Sierra Leone, West Virginia, and Vice President.
A subject can be compound or singular. If it is compound, then both are the subject. Example:John and Jeff rode their bikes.
The subject is one of the two main parts (subject and predicate) of a sentence; a subject noun is usually the first noun in a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is about. Example:Marie was very thirsty. (Marie is the subject noun)The statue was a pale green, evidence that it is made of bronze. (statue is the subject noun)The movie was okay but the popcorn was better. (a compound sentence with a subject noun for each part, movie and popcorn are both subject nouns in this sentence)
The two nouns in your sentence are words and nouns, they are plural, common nouns.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's (possessive form, modifies 'business')business (subject of the sentence)two (attributive, modifies 'week')week (attributive, modifies 'vacation')vacation (object of the preposition 'on')
Complex (APEX)