Which sport is better, Basketball or Baseball
interrogative
By adding the appropriate subject-auxiliary inversion, the sentence could be rewritten as an interrogative sentence.
The simple subject in an interrogative sentence is the noun or pronoun that the question is about. It is the person, place, thing, or idea that is the focus of the question.
An interrogative sentence is intended to elicit a reply or gain information about the subject of the sentence. The sentence "She was ill.", is a statement or an answer to an interrogative. It would answer such interrogatives as; "Has she ever been ill?" "Was there a time when she was not well?" " Do you know her medical history?" "Why did she die?" "Was she ill?"
This example is a question or interrogative sentence and so I do not think the term "simple subject' applies. However, if it has a subject, "what" is it.
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
To transform a declarative sentence into an interrogative sentence, you typically invert the subject and auxiliary verb. For example, "You are coming" becomes "Are you coming?" In some cases, you may need to add a question word like "what," "where," "why," etc. to the beginning of the sentence.
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
The subject of the sentence is the interrogative pronoun 'which', the verb is 'is'.
'Who is head usher?' is a sentence, an interrogative sentence, a question. Who = an interrogative pronoun and the subject of the sentence; takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question. is = verb head = adjective; describes the noun usher usher = noun and the object of the sentence
The sentence describes a compound subject, specifically a compound subject of a sentence as it consists of two separate subjects, "Gina" and "Sydney."
Yes, that is the correct use of the interrogative pronoun'who'.The pronoun 'who' is the subjective form, used as the subject of the sentence.The antecedent of the pronoun 'who' is the answer to the question.