Simple predicate
In a sentence, the subject is the word that tells what it is about. In the sentence "watching the light turn yellow" the subject would be the word watching.
In imperative sentences the subject is always the understood "you."
turn the sentence into a question
"Midas" is the subject. "could turn" is the verb.
Greek myth is the subject and glance is the verb Answer 2 But glance is really the subject of the sentence. 'According to Greek myth' is just an introductory clause. The sentence says 'a glance', not 'to glance'. Therefore glance is a noun, not a verb. The verb is 'turn'.
Look for the person or thing performing the action in the sentence. This is usually the subject. Pay attention to the verb in the sentence and ask yourself "who" or "what" is doing the action. Sometimes the subject can be hidden or implied, so be sure to consider context and word order to determine the subject.
All you have to do is think of a predicate if the fragment has only a subject. For example, the fragment is: Liz got the The complete sentence is: Liz got the prom dress she had wanted for years and years, but it couldn't fit her.
Simple means- ONE One means- SIMPLE The VERB is "(helping)". Turn your sentence into a QUESTION."(?)" Who is helping the class? She is helping the class ANSWER: She
The subject is improper for this forum. I got a citation for my improper left turn into oncoming traffic.
Did you have a research project due tomorrow or did you turn it in last Friday. Is your school mascot the tigers.
I do not believe turn is a verb. 'Is' is