Ambiguous question:
The subject( pronouns: He,She,It) agrees with verbs : does,is has
The pronouns agree with finite verb 'is to a present continuous verb:He is running.
simple present: He does not do
present perfect: He has eaten.
He is/ does/has
She is/ does/has
It is/does/has
verb
The subject is the main thing being talked about in the sentence. It is always a noun/pronoun. It always does the action in the sentence, otherwise known as the verb. The subject can be common or proper, singular or plural.
Example sentences:
"The young man ran the long marathon." Man is the simple subject in that sentence.
"The phone's keyboard was acting up." Keyboard is the simple subject in that sentence.
"The papers blew across the room." Papers is the simple subject in that sentence.
*Note: Simple subject is a term referring strictly to the subject. The complete subject is everything before the predicate/verb.
The subject tells who did the verb. If I said "Run" I would have to have a subject because someone has to do the running. Sometimes, the subject is not written, but it still exists. In the sentence "Go!", The subject is "You" understood, which means that someone is telling another person to do the verb.
I subject is typically the noun in the sentence that the sentence is about. It's the thing that does the verb in the sentence.
Ex: The duck walked up to the lemonade stand.
Lemonade stand is a noun but it is not doing the verb, "walked." Hence it being crossed out to not make any confusion. ;)
ask
Does a sentence need a subject?
Who or what the sentence is about is the subject of the sentence.
The subject of a sentence is who or what that sentence is about.
That would be the subject of the sentence.
Georgia and her friends raced together to the school
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
The subject is who or what the sentence is about.
A subject is what the sentence is about.To make a sentence with a subject think like if it was a theme.
The subject in the sentence is "you."
What is the subject of this sentence? She was the subject of an investigation.
The subject tells who or what the sentence is about.
Does a sentence need a subject?
Who or what the sentence is about is the subject of the sentence.
Who or what the sentence is about is the subject of the sentence.
The subject of a sentence is who or what that sentence is about.
A sentence missing a subject or a verb is a fragment.
That would be the subject of the sentence.