English, asked by carolpunyu0261, 2 months ago

what is a sentence?
what is a subject?
what is a predicate?
what is a noun?
what is an adverbs?​

Answers

Answered by Mayurshree
3

Answer:

A group of words that make a complete sense is known as sentence.

. The subject is what (or whom) the sentence is about,

The predicate tells something about the subject.

A noun is a naming word a noun is the name for A person place or thing.

words that add more meaning to a verb is known as adverb.

Answered by parneet09kaur
10

Sentence.= group of words containing a subject and a verb, that expresses a statement, a question, etc. When a sentence is written it begins with a big (capital) letter and ends with a full stop

Subject = Now, the subject of a sentence is the person, place, thing, or idea that is doing or being. The subject is sometimes called the “naming part” of a sentence or clause. It shows what the sentence is about, or who or what is performing an action in the sentence. The subject is most often a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase.

Predicate= the part of a sentence which has the verb, and which tells us what the subject is or does. In the sentence—‘He went cycling after returning from school’ the predicate is ‘went cycling after returning from school’

Noun = A noun is a word that names something, such as a person, place, thing, or idea. In a sentence, nouns can play the role of subject, direct object, indirect object, subject complement, object complement, appositive, or adjective. Make your writing shine.

Adverbs = An adverb is a word that modifies (describes) a verb (he sings loudly), an adjective (very tall), another adverb (ended too quickly), or even a whole sentence (Fortunately, I had brought an umbrella). Adverbs often end in -ly, but some (such as fast) look exactly the same as their adjective counterparts.

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