The verb in the sentence is: was
A telling part of a sentence usually includes the main idea or the crucial information that the sentence is trying to convey. It is the part that is most important for understanding the meaning of the sentence.
The answer is birds. Naming parts are called nouns.
Yes, certainly. 'Today is the first day of the rest of your life.'
If it's just those four words, then it should be "Who is here today?" If it's part of a longer statement, then either could be correct, depending on if it's plural or singular. "The boys who are here today" "The boy who is here today."
The word "include" in this sentence is a verb. It is used to show that savvy job seekers today add an app for their iPhone or iPad as part of their strategy.
A telling part of a sentence usually includes the main idea or the crucial information that the sentence is trying to convey. It is the part that is most important for understanding the meaning of the sentence.
The subject is what the rest of the sentence is telling about.
Today is a noun in that sentence.
The answer is birds. Naming parts are called nouns.
Down in your sentence is an adverb telling where.
Yes, certainly. 'Today is the first day of the rest of your life.'
An adverb.
The Title it self is funny. Plus there is more than one funny part in the story.
If it's just those four words, then it should be "Who is here today?" If it's part of a longer statement, then either could be correct, depending on if it's plural or singular. "The boys who are here today" "The boy who is here today."
Funny is an adjective.
The word "include" in this sentence is a verb. It is used to show that savvy job seekers today add an app for their iPhone or iPad as part of their strategy.
Yes, there should be a comma after "today" if the sentence continues with another clause or if it is part of a date written in month-day-year format.