All elevators have a certain capacity that they must maintain. There is not a number of people that must be adhere to but a certain weight capacity.
people
it's the president
The word 'yuppie' is a noun, a word for a person.Back in the 1980s, the term 'yuppie' was used to describe a 'young urban professional'; people in their twenties and thirties who were recent college graduates and starting their careers with high expectations. The term 'yuppie' was sometimes used with amusement because these focused, well groomed, well dressed, young people were the children of the 'hippies' of the 1960s.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example sentences:A yuppie will seek opportunities. (subject of the sentence)A prosperous future is the goal of a yuppie. (object of the preposition)
stealing cars, racing cars and motorcycles, tagging, fighting, shoplifting, base jumping, running on a tratin, elevator hopping.
People, quilts, hand
noun A+
people
People would be the simple subject
The capacity of this elevator is 15 people.
The simple subject of this sentence is "people".
It depends on the area of the elevators
People
Subject: Few people Predicate: had them
three
The subject of the sentence is 'they', a plural pronoun taking the place of the nouns that are the names of the people.
Those people are packed like sardines. We were packed like sardines inside the elevator at rush hour.
"Some shy people" is the complete subject.
so the input of a elevator is the people and the output of an elevator is the people getting out of the elevator