He barely understood the question the teacher asked him
You don't seem to get what I thought was understood.
A sentence where the subject is implied or understood is called an "elliptical sentence." In these sentences, the subject or part of the predicate is omitted because it can be inferred from the context. For example, in the response "I can go to the party, but you can't," the subject "you" is understood in the second part of the sentence.
I understood the instructions clearly and completed the task accordingly.
The subject is the entity that is doing the action of the sentence; the subject is expressed or understood. In an imperative like "Take the bus" for example, the subject is You (understood).
Yes, because a verbal alone is not a predicate. Rarely, the sentence is an exclamation or interjection, or has an understood verb or subject. "Doggone road icing!" "Raining hard today." (understood "it is") "Never seen that before!" (understood "I have")
The subject in this sentence is the "understood you" in this case would be Jade.
Your sentence cannot be understood!
When the answer was repeated, she understood it better.
This is an example sentence. He understood once he read the full sentence. The accused was given a seven year sentence.
The subject of the sentence is state, the subject is the class.An understood subject is a subject that is not stated in the sentence, usually an imperative sentence. Example:"Stop!" (the understood subject is you)"Bring me my glasses." (the understood subject is you)An understood subject can be a pronoun that has no antecedent, the subject is understood by the speaker and the person spoken to. Example:"Look, at her. She needs a fashion makeover" (only the speaker and listener know who is the subject of these sentences)"Oh, here is the one I've been looking for." (the speaker is likely holding up or gesturing toward the object referred to as 'the one')
You (understood).
to misconstrue a sentence is take it the wrong way because you have not fully understood it