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A compound sentence has to have two complete thoughts, each with a separate subject and predicate. It also has to have a conjunction that joins or relates them to each other.
The complete subject of a sentence tells who or what the sentence is about.Example: The huge, green, alien from Mars waved to us.The simple subject also tells who or what the sentence is about, but it doesn't have all of the descriptive words. The simple subject is usually just a single noun.Example: The alien from Mars wawed to us.
2 + 2 = 4 for example, is a complete sentence. "2 + 2" is the subject. "= 4" is the predicate.
The complete subject of a sentence tells what the sentence is about. The huge, green, slimy alien from Mars waved to us. The "huge, green, slimy alien from Mars" is the subject. The simple subject also tells who or what the sentence is about, but it doesn't have all the descriptive words (adjectives). The simple subject is just a single noun. The huge, green, slimy alien from Mars waved to us. So the simple subject is "alien". Same goes for simple predicate, the main verb without adverbs.
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 you reframe the sentence, you will get the complete subject: "trouble develops on the safari." the complete subject is "trouble."
example of sentence complete subject and complete predicate Listening=subject is not=complete predicate
The complete subject of the sentence is 'The class'.
The subject of the sentence is "she" and the predicate is "live."
no it does not
A complete sentence is comprised of a subject and a predicate. The subject is a noun or noun phrase, and the predicate essentially tells what the subject does.
no beacuse it does no have a predicate. to have a compllete sentence you need a subject and a predicate. The above answer is incorrect. The complete subject of a sentence such as "Autumn leaves need to be raked up." is "Autumn leaves". The answerer above mistook "Subject" for "Sentence" A complete sentence needs a verb, but a complete subject does not have a verb unless it is a clause.
any sentence with a subject and a predicate
The complete subject of the sentence is "Mrs. Marcus".
No, a complete sentence needs a subject and verb at least.
No, "Is you listened" is not a complete sentence because it is grammatically incorrect. The correct form would be "Have you listened?" featuring the auxiliary verb "have" to form a question in the present perfect tense.
It is the subject and any modifiers