I would rearrange that sentence to say: Paul is not old enough for that movie, is he? or Is Paul old enough for that movie?
Paul Wight was not in the movie Elf.
No, Paul does not die in Misery.
Paul Newman never appeared in a film by that title.
Bud, Not Buddy is a 1999 children's novel by Christopher Paul Curtis
The movie was "The Hustler."
The subject in the sentence "Hi, my name is Paul; are you the new student?" is "I," which is implied in the phrase "my name is Paul." In the second part of the sentence, "you" serves as the subject in the question "are you the new student?"
Paul Wight was not in the movie Elf.
something -paul
The nouns are:Paul Bunyanherotales
He's Paul. That's enough information.....
No, Paul does not die in Misery.
Did Paul go to college? (Paul did go to college)Did - auxiliary verb;Paul - proper noun, subject of the sentence;go - main verb;to - preposition;college - noun, object of the preposition 'to'.
The Small Paul by Paul Frank Toddler Girl's 2-piece Swimsuit does not have enough room for a swim diaper.
Paul Sorvino played Paul Cicero.
The pronouns in the sentence "May Paul go with you?" are "Paul" (a proper noun functioning as a subject) and "you" (a second-person pronoun). "You" refers to the person being addressed, while "Paul" is the person being discussed. There are no other pronouns in this sentence.
Paul Newman never appeared in a film by that title.
It depends on the context of the specific situation you're referring to, as there isn't enough information to determine whether Paul talks to Jane. If this is about a particular story, movie, or real-life scenario, please provide more details for a clearer answer.