Understood "you"
By adding the appropriate subject-auxiliary inversion, the sentence could be rewritten as an interrogative sentence.
To change interrogative present simple active voice sentences into passive voice, you typically move the object of the active sentence to the subject position in the passive sentence, and use a form of "be" along with the past participle of the verb. For example, change "Do you know the answer?" to "Is the answer known by you?"
an interrogative sentence is a sentence. Where you express your feelings such as joy and shock with a question.
The simple subject of the sentence is "you".
"It can." In that sentence, the pronoun "it" is the simple subject.
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
there is no simple subject in a interrogative sentence sorry
interrogative
By adding the appropriate subject-auxiliary inversion, the sentence could be rewritten as an interrogative sentence.
What is an interrogative sentence? is an interrogative sentence. An interrogative sentence asks a question.
The simple subject is the noun team.The complete subject is 'The whole team'.In an interrogative sentence (a question), the verb and subject may be transposed, for example, "Why was the whole team penalized?" is a transposed form of "The whole team was penalized, why?"
To change interrogative present simple active voice sentences into passive voice, you typically move the object of the active sentence to the subject position in the passive sentence, and use a form of "be" along with the past participle of the verb. For example, change "Do you know the answer?" to "Is the answer known by you?"
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?"
A subject in a question is commonly found after the verb (this is called inverted order). To make finding the subject easier, switching the question into a simple statement will help. That would make the interrogative sentence a declarative sentence. "Your mother will be visiting us at Christmas." This sentence now has the simple Subject-Verb-Complement sentence structure (a complement is a fancy word for the rest of the sentence). So, simply put, the subject is mother.
1. Assertive or declarative sentence (a statement) 2. Imperative sentence (a command) 3. Interrogative sentence (a question) 4. Exclamatory sentence (an exclamation) 5. Negative sentence (a Negativeness)
interrogative sentence about Tiger