When I went to the zoo i saw a pretty nice horse
I lost my horse. I miss my horse. Where is my horse?
Q: "How do you punctuate this sentence? "i see a horse do you" A: I see a horse, do you? That is how you correct it, or punctuate.
"It had to come by horse" is a declarative sentence. A declarative sentence is a type of sentence that makes a statement or expresses an opinion. In this sentence, the subject is "it," the verb is "had to come," and the method of transportation is specified as "by horse."
The dark horse was beautiful.
The noun in that sentence is "horse." It's the one doing all the work while "old" just sits there looking pretty. So, give some credit to the horse for being the star of the show, okay?
I walked around the horse's stable.
In this sentence, I think 'horse' is the noun.
The grouping of words "The horse and carriage has come," contains both subject (The horse and carriage) and predicate (has come) and is therefore a complete sentence.
It is describing the horse. It is a drinking horse. The verb in that sentence is the word "is".
My horse trainer counted my horse's strides.
She was a hungry horse.
We live in a large house with a stable and a Horse called Jute.