Tom yelled, "Catch the Dog!"
The pronoun is he, the subject of the first part of the compound sentence.
The frightened dog cowered in the corner as it's owner yelled at it for chewing the carpet.
A sentence can be as long as one desires, so long as it is one (1) thought or idea. If it contains multiple ideas or thoughts, then it is a run on sentence. "The cats played and ran all night." Run on would be, "The cats played and ran all night because they thought they would be cool, it's not that I don't like cats is just that they are very annoying." "I saw my dog chasing the squirrel onto the back yard and then I yelled to my neighbors "Hey Bob! Can you catch my dog?" and he couldn't hear me so I yelled louder and louder and louder until he finally came over and tried to catch my dog but he failed and fell his face first into the mud because it rained last night."
"The dog has its own collar" is grammatically correct. Many people mistakenly use "it's" in this kind of sentence, but that is the contraction for "it is," not the possessive form of "it."
I love my dog. or I love my dog! you need to capitalize the I and end with punctuation.
Correct
The correct past tense form of "bite" is "bit." Therefore, the correct sentence would be: "A dog bit me."
The dog's rapid movements made him very difficult to catch.
The possessive noun in the sentence is in the incorrect form.The correct possessive form for 'the toy of the dog' is 'the dog's toy'.
The name Bob is a noun in an exclamation sentence: Bob yelled, "Stop!".Happy day!Sufferin' succotash!Oh man!Holy cow!Holy hot dog!Rats!
Hitting a dog is the same as maltreating it. She did not think he was maltreating her when he yelled at her. We are maltreating our bodies when we abuse drugs.
The dog ran after the cat. He will catch up with us after his next class.