Asked by mimis
The part of the sentence that tells “who” or “what” the sentence is about is the
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
That's the subject.
Definition: the subject tells who or what a sentence is about — typically a noun, pronoun, noun phrase, or noun clause. It often appears before the verb in English.
Examples:
- "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." (simple subject: fox; complete subject: The quick brown fox)
- "Running every day keeps him healthy." (subject = Running every day)
- "(You) Sit down." (imperative — subject you is implied)
Definition: the subject tells who or what a sentence is about — typically a noun, pronoun, noun phrase, or noun clause. It often appears before the verb in English.
Examples:
- "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." (simple subject: fox; complete subject: The quick brown fox)
- "Running every day keeps him healthy." (subject = Running every day)
- "(You) Sit down." (imperative — subject you is implied)
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