The subject of the sentence "We walked to the park" is "We." It refers to the group of people who are performing the action of walking. In this context, "we" indicates the speaker and at least one other person.
In the sentence "You walked to the park," the simple predicate is "walked," which is the main verb that tells what the subject (you) did. The complete predicate is "walked to the park," which includes the verb and all the words that describe what the subject is doing and where they are going.
subject = dog verb = ran
I/you/we/they have walked. He/she/it haswalked.
Say that the sentence is Bill and his friend walked to school. "Bill and his friend" is the complete subject.:)
Walked is a verb.
Yes, the grammar of the sentence "The subject walked past the door" is correct. It has a subject ("The subject") and a verb ("walked") that agree in tense, and it conveys a complete thought.
It depends if you are using it as a subject or an object. The subject is "he and I" the object is "him and me" Examples: Sub.: He and I went to the park Object: Do you want to go to the park with him and me?
The answer is "us"
The subject of the sentence "Over the hill came a park ranger" is "a park ranger." The phrase "Over the hill" is a prepositional phrase that provides additional context about the location from which the park ranger is coming, but it does not serve as the subject of the sentence.
Park
park is
No, a personal pronoun is a word that replaces a sugject noun. In this sentence, "The dog walked in the park." Dog is the subject noun. The next sentence would be, "In what park did he walk?" He is the pronoun for the subject noun, dog.