A sentence with two subjects and one verb is known as a compound subject sentence. It typically combines two nouns or pronouns that share the same verb. For example, in the sentence "Alice and Bob went to the market," both "Alice" and "Bob" are the subjects sharing the verb "went." This structure allows for more concise expression while conveying that both subjects are performing the same action.
A sentence can have one or more subjects, depending on its structure. Typically, a simple sentence contains a single subject, while compound sentences can have multiple subjects connected by conjunctions. Additionally, in complex sentences, there may be subordinate clauses with their own subjects. Thus, the number of subjects in a sentence can vary widely.
A simple subject is a noun (person, place, or thing) or pronoun that is doing the action (the verb). The word order in a basic English sentence is subject, verb, object ( the object is the 'receiver' of the action).Example sentence: The man saw the bus. In this sentence the man is the one who is doing the action (see/saw) the man is the subject, see is the verb (past tense) and bus is the object.However, subjects can also be a clause.Exmple sentence: What we need is a sharp knife. In this sentence the noun clause what we need is the subject, but because there is no noun or pronoun doing the action, this is not a simple subject.
If "the number" is the subject of a sentence or clause, the verb in the same sentence or clause should be singular in form, but if "a number" is the subject of a sentence or clause, the verb in the same sentence or clause should be plural in form. The rationale supporting this rule is that the phrase "the number" implies that only one number is being considered, but "a number" implies that more than one number is likely.
subjects and verbs must agree in one another number ( singular or plural)..
rule 1:a singular subject requires a singular verb rule2:a plural subject requires a plural verb rule3:singular indefinite pronouns take singular verbs rule4:plural indefinite pronouns take plural verbs rule5:a collective noun takes a singular verb when the group it names acts as one single unit rule6:a collective noun takes a plural verb when the group it names acts individually rule7:compound subjects joined by"AND" take plural verbs.However ,when these compound subjects are considered one item or reffer to one person or thing, then it requires a singular verb rule8:compound subjects connected by or,nor,either...or and neither...nor,the verb agrees with the nearer subject. rule9:titles,amounts,and measurmaents take singular verbs rule10:plural nouns preceded by"a number of" take plural verbs rule11:plural nouns preceded by"the number of" take singular verbs
A subject is a sentence with a noun in it. So you would have two nouns in that sentence. A verb is an action word. So a sentence with two subjects and one verb must include two nouns and one action word. for example: Sally and Ikicked a ball. Sally and the word I are the nouns. (a noun is a person,place,thing, or an idea)The verb of this sentence would be kicked. I think a sentence with two subjects and one verb is called a compound sentence. I hope this answered your question!
The structure is likely a compound subject. This means that two or more subjects are connected by a conjunction and share the same verb in the sentence.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
Yes. Jack and Jill went up the hill. This sentence has two subjects (Jack, Jill) and one verb (went). Jack and Jill went up the hill and got a pail of water. This sentence has two subjects (Jack, Jill) and two verbs (went, got).
Yes, it can have two subjects and only one verb. Marsha and Glenda went to the store.
As it's written, no, it is not. It lacks a subject. The only possible subjects that correspond to the verb is I, we, you,and they. The example is one pronoun short of being a sentence.
because compound sentence has one or two subjects usualy no more than two and usualy one idea verb or objective a complex sentence can have multaple subjects verbs and ideas i hope i was a help i just learned thin in school 8th grade
In this sentence, you have 3 different subjects [reading, conference, and writing] each of these subjects is using the same verb [maketh]. In this case, parallel structure makes the verb apply to all 3 subjects because they are in a sense structured the same way, and it sounds awkward to use the same verb 3 times in a sentence. A similar example would be to say 'Take two steps to the right, one to the left, and one forward.'
When there is more than one verb in a sentence, it is called a compound verb. Each verb in a compound verb has its own subject and contributes to the overall meaning of the sentence.
The verb - is - is a present tense be verb so the tense of this sentence is present. Also because there is only one verb you could say it is present simple.
There can be more than one subject in a sentence when the sentence has a compound subject, which consists of two or more subjects connected by a conjunction like "and" or "or." For example, in the sentence "Alice and Bob are going to the store," "Alice" and "Bob" are both subjects.
A simple sentence typically consists of one subject and one verb. For example, "She runs" has the subject 'she' and the verb 'runs'.