Javier
Corner is a noun in the sentence "Around the corner was her mom."
The subject of a sentence is what the sentence is about.A noun is a word for a person, place, or thing.The subject of a sentence will be a noun or a pronoun (a pronoun takes the place of a noun)Examples:The door has been painted. (the subject of the sentence is 'door', a noun)My mother made a cake. (the subject of the sentence is 'mother', a noun)Paris is beautiful this time of year. (the subject of the sentence is 'Paris', a noun)I forgot my book. (the subject of the sentence is 'I', a pronoun that takes the place of my name, a noun)They bought a new house. (the subject of the sentence is 'they', a pronoun that takes the place of the names of the people who bought the house; their names are nouns)
Maybe, but the question is a little garbled.The following is a complete sentence:Their snoring kept Annie awake. (note the period - without it, the sentence would not be complete)Your example had no indication of where the sentence in question began or ended, and there seems to be an extra A kicking around in there.
A verb is the action or state of being the subject is in. The other word around the subject can be many things such a adjectives (describes a noun), adverb (describes an adjective or a verb), noun (person, place, or thing), and so forth. However, these are parts of speech.Every sentence has 2 parts the subject and the predicate. The subject is what the sentence is about, everything around the subject is the predicate. Predicates tell something about the subject.
Puppy is the subject. Feet is the object of a preposition that is modifying how the puppy jumped. One is an adjective of puppy.
A simple subject is also a complete subject when it only contains one word.For instance: He went to the store. "He" is the only part of the subject at all. The rest of it is part of the complete predicate.
Mom needs help
sentence fragment
The complete subject is hundreds of gulls.
The subject is who, what, or where the sentence revolves around. For example, in the sentence "The dog chased the cat", the dog is the subject. The subject is usually the first noun in the sentence, unless the sentence starts with a prepositional phrase, like "throughout the afternoon".
The subject of this sentence is litter. In this sentence puppies is the object of a preposition.
"Around the next bend" by itself is a prepositional phrase. It cannot be a sentence by itself because it has no subject. In a conversation, a subject may be implied, but that does not make it a sentence.
A sentence always provides a complete thought. It has a subject (noun, pronoun) and a predicate (verb, or identity verb), and has end punctuation (period, question mark, or exclamation point).Examples:Sentence: John ran around the tree.Non-sentence: Around the tree very fast.Sentence: Run! (the understood subject is "you" and it means "you must run")Non-sentence: Running as fast as he could go. (who?)Non-sentence: The fastest runner ever to attend the school. (did what?)
Corner is a noun in the sentence "Around the corner was her mom."
The simple subject of this sentence is "people".
bat
The sentence is imperative therefore the subject is (you).