False
The subject is the one doing the action or what the sentence is about. Examples: She is going to the store. (She is the subject). I am hungry. (I would be the subject). The action that takes place in a sentence is the verb.
No it is the person place or thing (noun), the action is a verb which is the predicate.
The subject is the person or thing performing the action, the person or thing the sentence is about. For example, Marie bought a new book. (The person performing the action is Marie.) Another example: "Answers.com is a wonderful website." (What is the sentence about? Answers.com.) The subject often (although not always) comes at the beginning of the sentence, and is used with the main verb: My sister studied at Northeastern University. (Since the subject answers the question "who, or what, performed the action, "sister" is the subject.)
The two parts of a sentence are the subject and the predicate. The predicate is an action. The subject is a person, place, thing or abstract idea.
The subject is the person or thing doing the action (verb). In a simple sentence like:The dog ate the meat.dog is the subject, the dog did the action (eat).However in complicated sentences the subject is not so easy to see.The assigned text for history class contains more than twenty chapters.In this sentence text is the subject.
False
The subject is the one doing the action or what the sentence is about. Examples: She is going to the store. (She is the subject). I am hungry. (I would be the subject). The action that takes place in a sentence is the verb.
No it is the person place or thing (noun), the action is a verb which is the predicate.
The person, place, or thing that the sentence is about is the subject.The subject of the sentence performs the action.
A complete sentence needs to have a subject and a predicate. subject = a person, place, thing or abstract idea. predicate = an action
The subject is the person or thing performing the action, the person or thing the sentence is about. For example, Marie bought a new book. (The person performing the action is Marie.) Another example: "Answers.com is a wonderful website." (What is the sentence about? Answers.com.) The subject often (although not always) comes at the beginning of the sentence, and is used with the main verb: My sister studied at Northeastern University. (Since the subject answers the question "who, or what, performed the action, "sister" is the subject.)
The simple subject is you. You are doing the action of this sentence, which in this case takes place in the future.
The two parts of a sentence are the subject and the predicate. The predicate is an action. The subject is a person, place, thing or abstract idea.
The subject is the person or thing doing the action (verb). In a simple sentence like:The dog ate the meat.dog is the subject, the dog did the action (eat).However in complicated sentences the subject is not so easy to see.The assigned text for history class contains more than twenty chapters.In this sentence text is the subject.
The subject in a sentence is a name, place or thing, and usually is followed by a verb which is an action word. Therefore, I believe the subject in the sentence "Are you going to the pie eating contest?" is you.
No, the word she is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a female in a sentence. Example Sentence:Maria is a good cook, she makes delicious soup.
This is the definition of the subject of a sentence, normally a noun. The action or identity (verb) is the predicate.That is called a noun. The subject of the sentence is the noun. A noun varifies a person, place, thing or idea.