The subject of the sentence "After breakfast she needs to run a few errands" is "she." This pronoun refers to the person who is performing the action of needing to run errands. The phrase "After breakfast" provides additional context but does not affect the subject.
"She" is the subject of this sentence.
This is a simple sentence:Your favorite meal (subject) is (predicate) breakfast (object).It contains a single independent clause, unlike a compound sentence that contains two or more independent clauses joined by a coordinator. Coordinators are the following words:forandnorbutoryetso.
No, the pronoun 'himself' is a reflexive pronoun used to 'reflect back' to the subject in a sentence. Example: Dad made himself some breakfast. The pronoun 'himself' is also a intensive pronoun used to emphasize its noun antecedent. Example: Dad himself made breakfast. Even when the pronoun is the first word in a sentence, it is not the subject of the sentence. Example: Himself a cook, dad always makes breakfast. (reflexive use of the pronoun, the subject of the sentence is 'dad')
In the sentence "We ordered breakfast from room service," the predicate is "ordered breakfast from room service." It includes the verb "ordered" and provides information about what the subject "we" did. The predicate describes the action and the object of that action, which is "breakfast."
It = subject who = object
The subject of the sentence is Isabel.
Hotel
The predicate in the sentence "you ordered breakfast from room service" is "ordered breakfast from room service." It includes the verb "ordered," which is the action being performed, and the noun phrase "breakfast from room service," which is the object of the verb and provides more information about what was ordered. The predicate is essential in a sentence as it conveys the action or state of being of the subject.
"skills" is the subject of this sentence. "Communication " modifies the subject.
The subject is he, and the verb is was.
The simple subject of the sentence is "world."
The simple subject is "which" and the predicate is "have been misspelled."