Jane is the subject of the sentence. An easy way to find the subject is ask yourself, "Who are what did the action?"
The pronouns in the sentence are "Jane," "I," "all," and "me."
Yes, a pronoun takes the place of a noun and performs all of the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Noun subject of the sentence: Aunt Jane made cookies for the children.Pronoun subject of the sentence: She made cookies for the children.Noun subject of the clause: The cookies that Aunt Jane made are for the children.Pronoun subject of the clause: The cookies that she made are for the children.
An example sentence with a proper noun (Jane), a concrete noun (sign), and an abstract noun (idea):Jane has a great idea for our sign.
no. Their is a possessive pronoun, by itself it cannot be the subject of a sentence. We, they, I, he,she, it can be subjects but not their. Their can be part of the subject if it has a noun with it: Their dog chased my cat; here "their dog" is the subject.
Yes, the sentence "my home is very neat and clean" is a descriptive sentence because it provides information about the state of cleanliness in your home.
The pronouns in the sentence are "Jane," "I," "all," and "me."
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing. A noun is used for the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.The subject is what the sentence is about. The subject of a sentence can be a noun or a pronoun (a word that takes the place of a noun); a single word or a group of words. For Example:John ran home. ('John' is a proper noun, a person's name, the subject of the sentence.)The crying child ran home. (The noun 'child' is the subject of the sentence; the noun phrase 'the crying child' is the complete subject of the sentence.)He ran home. (The pronoun he is taking the place of the noun John, or the noun child; 'he' is the subject of the sentence.)A boy with a book in his hand ran home. (The noun 'boy' is the subject of the sentence; 'a boy with a book in his hand' is the complete subject.)The noun 'home' is the object of all of the sentences.In the last sentence, the noun 'book' is the object of the preposition 'with', and the noun 'hand' is the object of the preposition 'in'.
"All is well" is not a sentence fragment because "All" is your subject and "is" is your verb. In a complete sentence contains a subject and a verb.
Yes, a pronoun takes the place of a noun and performs all of the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Noun subject of the sentence: Aunt Jane made cookies for the children.Pronoun subject of the sentence: She made cookies for the children.Noun subject of the clause: The cookies that Aunt Jane made are for the children.Pronoun subject of the clause: The cookies that she made are for the children.
the subject of a sentence may be what parts of speech' call?
subject noun
An example sentence with a proper noun (Jane), a concrete noun (sign), and an abstract noun (idea):Jane has a great idea for our sign.
all i know is she NOW lives in Bournemouth in England... sorry
The subject of the sentence is "Dad." All the rest of the sentence is the predicate.
"All visitors to the factory" is the complete subject.
After all her years in academia earning three Ph.Ds, Jane's family knew that Jane would approach any issue intellectually in order to investigate all the facts.
no. Their is a possessive pronoun, by itself it cannot be the subject of a sentence. We, they, I, he,she, it can be subjects but not their. Their can be part of the subject if it has a noun with it: Their dog chased my cat; here "their dog" is the subject.