The lines "An aged thrush, frail, gaunt, and small, / In blast-beruffled plume" most plainly express awe for the subject, as they describe the thrush as fragile and weather-worn yet still singing with fervor and beauty. Hardy's use of imagery highlights the striking contrast between the bird's appearance and its powerful, uplifting song.
they do not have either a subject or a predicate like sentence but they expresses
I see you.
A sentence contains a subject and a predicate. It expresses a complete thought.
A sentence contains a subject and a verb. The subject is typically the person or thing performing the action in the sentence, while the verb expresses the action or state of being of the subject.
Simple sentence
It has a subject (you). It has a verb (laugh). It expresses a complete thought. Looks like a sentence to me.
a quote is a statement that has been made by someone else. en excerpt is a passage or extract (meaning more than one line) from a larger work...such as a newspaper or book/novel. think of a quote as being "this is what they said" and an excerpt as being "this is why they said it/ what they mean" to explain the qoute. an excerpt and a qoute can both explain a certain subject further by expressing a sismilar or opposite point of view.
This sentence is imperative (that is, it expresses an order), therefore it has no subject. The implied subject is 'You'. "[You must/you should] get away from the water during a storm."
Can is not an independent clause, it's a modal auxiliary verb that expresses ability. Example: He can do fifty push-ups. An independent clause is a sentence that contains a subject, verb, and expresses a complete thought.
This sentence is imperative (that is, it expresses an order), therefore it has no subject. The implied subject is 'You'. "[You must/you should] get away from the water during a storm."
This sentence is imperative (that is, it expresses an order), therefore it has no subject. The implied subject is 'You'. "[You must/you should] get away from the water during a storm."
Euclid B. Rogers has written: 'The topical excerpt library' -- subject(s): Theology