freshwater and saltwater
A sentence must contain a subject (who or what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what the subject is doing or what is being said about the subject).
The first noun in a sentence may be the subject of the sentence, but NOT ALWAYS, for example:John sat on the bench. (the noun 'John' is the subject of the sentence)He sat on the bench. (the pronoun 'he' is the subject of the sentence, the first noun in the sentence is 'bench', the object of the preposition 'on')
In grammar, the subject is the person, thing, or entity that is performing the action or being described by the verb in a sentence. It is typically located at the beginning of a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is about.
The subject is one of the two main parts (subject and predicate) of a sentence; a subject noun is usually the first noun in a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence is about. Example:Marie was very thirsty. (Marie is the subject noun)The statue was a pale green, evidence that it is made of bronze. (statue is the subject noun)The movie was okay but the popcorn was better. (a compound sentence with a subject noun for each part, movie and popcorn are both subject nouns in this sentence)
A subject in a sentence typically contains the noun or pronoun that performs the action of the verb. It is what the sentence is about.
areas
Simple trick to find a subject/verb is to remove words from the sentence until it doesn't make sense anymore: There are (many freshwater and saltwater) areas (in the everglades).
Park
The simple subject is "flowers".
Ken Schultz has written: 'The ultimate book of freshwater fishing' -- subject(s): Fishing, Freshwater fishes 'World Atlas of Saltwater Fishing' 'North American Fishing' 'The Complete Book of Sportfishing' 'Ken Schultz's fishing encyclopedia' -- subject(s): Encyclopedias, Fishes, Fishing 'Ken Schultz's field guide to saltwater fish' -- subject(s): Identification, Marine fishes, Nonfiction, OverDrive, Sports & Recreations 'The ultimate book of freshwater fishing' -- subject(s): Freshwater fishes, Fishing 'The art of trolling' -- subject(s): Trolling (Fishing)
A. L Kontis has written: 'Simulation of freshwater-saltwater interfaces in the Brooklyn-Queens aquifer system, Long Island, New York' -- subject(s): Saltwater encroachment, Groundwater flow
The subject of the sentence is "you"
G. Thomas Watters has written: 'A guide to the freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Freshwater mussels, Identification, Mussels 'The freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Identification, Margaritiferidae, Freshwater mussels, Unionidae
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
Anton Husak has written: 'The saltwater craftsman' -- subject(s): Handicraft, Saltwater fishing
Harold Meisler has written: 'Preliminary delineation of salty ground water in the northern Atlantic Coastal Plain' -- subject(s): Groundwater, Saltwater encroachment 'The effect of eustatic sea-level changes on saltwater-freshwater in the northern Atlantic coastal plain' -- subject(s): Sea level, Groundwater, Saltwater encroachment 'Hydrogeology of the carbonate rocks of the Lancaster 15-minute quadrangle, southeastern Pennsylvania' -- subject(s): Carbonate Rocks, Groundwater, Rocks, Carbonate 'The occurrence and geochemistry of salty ground water in the northern Atlantic Coastal Plain' -- subject(s): Atlantic Coast (U.S.), Geochemistry, Groundwater, Saltwater encroachment, Underground Water, Water chemistry, Water, Underground 'Carbonate rocks of Cambrian and Ordovician age in the Lancaster quadrangle, Pennsylvania' -- subject(s): Carbonates, Geology, Geology, Stratigraphic, Stratigraphic Geology
The subject is who or what the sentence is about.