SUBJECT
The subject is the agent of the sentence in the active voice; it is the person or thing that performs or is responsible for the action of the sentence, and it normally precedes the verb.
NOTE: Every sentence in English must have a
subject. (In the case of commands, the subject (you) is understood.) The
subject may be a single noun.
Coffee is delicious.
Milk contains calcium.
The subject may be a noun phrase.
A noun
phrase is a group of words ending with a noun. (It CANNOT begin with a
preposition.)
The
book is on the table.
That new red car is John's.
Examples of subjects:
We girls are not going to that movie.
George likes boats.
Mary, John, George, and I went to a restaurant last night.
The weather was very bad yesterday.
The chemistry professor canceled class today.
The bank closed at two o'clock.
It
can act as a pronoun for a noun or can be the subject of an impersonal verb. As
the subject of an impersonal verb, the pronoun is not actually used in place of
a noun, but is part of an idiomatic expression.
It rains quite often here in the summer.
It is hard to believe that he is dead.
In
some sentences, the true subject does not appear in normal subject position.
There can act as a pseudo-subject and is treated like a subject when changing
word order to a question. However, the true subject appears after the verb, and
the number of the true subject controls the verb.
2 Comments
Thank You for suggested. sir
ReplyDeleteWelcome
Delete