A subject is the part of a sentence that indicates who or what the sentence is about, typically a noun or pronoun. The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells something about the subject, usually containing a verb and providing information such as what the subject does or what is done to it. Together, the subject and predicate form a complete thought in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "The cat (subject) sleeps on the mat (predicate)," both components work together to convey meaning.
a predicate is like where,what,when.hello ugly people
If there is no subject, it is not a sentence.
A subject pronoun can be the subject of a sentence or the subject of a clause.
Yes, the subject pronouns function as the subject of a sentence or a clause.The subject pronouns are: I, you, we, he, she, it, and who.Examples:I do like that movie. (subject of the sentence)The movie that I like is on TV tonight. (subject of the relative clause)You may like the movie too. (subject of the sentence)You will also like the actor who is in it. (subject of the relative clause)
subject
what subject is
The subject of the sentence is "you"
unknown subject of an investigationunknown subject
is the word his a subject
The subject, is what you are talking about, if you have no subject, you are speaking about nothing.
GradPoint - each subject is discussed in turn
The subject tells who or what the sentence is about.