The subject of every imperative sentence is typically the understood "you." Although the subject is often not explicitly stated, it is implied that the speaker is addressing the listener directly, instructing them to perform an action. For example, in the sentence "Close the door," the subject is understood to be "you," as in "You close the door."
i don't know, that is why i am asking you.
you
Well, it can't be in the subject of the sentence, for example [Yummy is this cookie.]The subject is usually in the predicate. But there are exceptions to every rule. Almost every.
Well, it can't be in the subject of the sentence, for example [Yummy is this cookie.]The subject is usually in the predicate. But there are exceptions to every rule. Almost every.
* Declarative * interogative * exclamitory * imperitave
The simple subject of the sentence in the question is brother.
no, every sentence needs a subject and a verb. waved is a verb but there is no subject. the subject is who or what is doing the verb.
Every sentence has a subject, what the sentence is about, and a predicate, what tells something about the subject. In this sentence, the subject is "cat" and the predicate is "content."
two esential parts of every declarative or an imperative sentence are subject (about which or whom something is being said) and predicate (what is being said about the subject)
Noun and verbevery sentence must have a subject and a predicate!!
egg
Brother