Agree
A complete sentence must have a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or the action taking place). It must also express a complete thought and be punctuated correctly.
No. A sentence must contain a subject and a verb. "Here's why" does not have a subject or a verb.
The tutor always proof reads John's writing assignments.This sentence has a subject (the tutor) so it must be an active sentence.John's writing assignments were always proof read.This sentence doesn't tell us who did the action (proof reading) so it is a passive sentence. Also the presence of a be verb (were) is another clue that it is a passive sentence.
Every complete sentence has two parts, a subject and a predicate. The subject is the part of the sentence that tells who the sentence is about and the predicate tells what the subject is doing.
The subject-verb-direct object sentence pattern is a type of sentence structure where the subject performs the action of the verb on the direct object. For example, in the sentence "She (subject) read (verb) the book (direct object)," the subject "she" is performing the action of reading on the direct object "the book."
Yes, it does. The subject pronoun is the subject of a sentence or a clause. Both a sentence or a clause must have a verb.Examples:He wants a new jacket. (the subject of the sentence is 'he', the verb is 'wants')The one he wants has his team's logo. (the subject of the clause is 'he', the verb is 'wants'; the subject of the sentence is 'one', the verb is 'has')I saw the jacket he wants at Mike's. (the relative clause 'he wants' relates to the direct object of the sentence 'jacket')
A sentence must contain a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is being said about the subject).
In order to not write a sentence fragment, you must always have a subject in your sentence and a predicate. For example: Fragment: Went to the movies. Sentence: I went to the movies.
The subject must agree in number with the verb.
A sentence is about a subject "doing" something. A sentence must be a complete thought to be a sentence.
The simple subject (the main thing/things doing the verb) must be in the sentence along with the verb.
Reflexive pronouns always "reflect back" to the subject of the sentence or clause. Yourselves is one word. A sentence for it would be - You must wash yourselves, or you will soon be yourselves again.
No its not. A sentence must have a verb and a subject. There is no verb in that sentence.
Does it have a subject and a verb? The subject is "They" and the verb is "made" so it is a sentence. A proper sentence must have a subject and a verb and make sense.
A sentence must have a subject and predicate to be a sentence. The exception is when the subject is inferred. "going to the sale" is not a sentence. It needs a subject. We are going to the sale. is a sentence. Speaking to another person, "Stay here" is a sentence. The subject "you" is inferred.
At a minimum, a sentence must have a subject (generally a noun or pronoun) and a verb.
"You" is the subject in that sentence.