Pronoun. A simple subject can be either a noun or a pronoun.
"It can." In that sentence, the pronoun "it" is the simple subject.
The simple subject. A complete subject is the simple subject, or the main word along with any of the modifiers that might describe the subject.
In this sentence : The boy next door goes to our school.The subject is boy (a noun)The complete subject is the boy next doorThe simple subject is the noun or pronoun in the subject position and the complete subject is all the other words associated with the subject.
The simple subject in the sentence is "puppy." It is the main noun that the sentence is about.
"Cherokee" is the simple subject in that sentence.
A simple subject can be either a noun or a pronoun.
verb
A simple subject is almost always a noun.
the simple subject of a sentence can be a noun , a pronoun or a noun phrase
a simple predicate is a verb and simple subject is a noun
Examples of the noun 'family' as subject and simple subject:My family comes from Minneapolis.the complete subject is the noun phrase 'my family'the simple subject is the noun 'family'A family of moles lives under the shed.the complete subject is the noun phrase 'a family of moles'the simple subject is the noun 'family'The first family to homestead this valley were Morgans.the complete subject is the noun phrase 'the first family to homestead this valley'The simple subject is the noun 'family'
A simple subject is what or whom the sentence is about, the main noun. A simple predicate is the action the subject is doing in the sentence, a verb. These are simple, not associated with the compound subject or compound predicate, which are inverse to these. SO:Sentence: The old dog loafs by the fire.Simple subject: dogSimple predicate: loafs
The term 'simple noun' is sometimes used to describe the nouns used to make a compound noun; for example the 'simple noun' bath and the 'simple noun' tub join to form the 'compound noun' bathtub.Another use of the term 'simple noun' as an alternative for the term 'simple subject' of a sentence; for example:A big, slimy, green, worm crawled out of my apple.The entire noun phrase 'A big, slimy, green, worm' is the subject of the sentence, the simple subject is 'worm'.
The simple subject is either the noun phrase The next English monarch, or else simply the noun monarch.Different teachers will want different answers - but both are equally correct.Good luck!
A simple sentence is made up of a subject (usually a noun) and a predicate (usually a verb).
The simple subject is the key noun or pronoun that tells what the sentence is about.
subject=noun