The word 'she' is a subject pronoun. It is not difficult to work that out: just use the word in a pair of simple sentences, once as a subject and once as an object, and see which sounds right. 'She loves David.' 'David loves she.' The first sentence is right, the second is wrong. It would have to be 'David loves her.' 'Her' is the object pronoun.
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
Oh, dude, the verb in that sentence is "loves." It's like the action word, you know, showing what Sam is all about, his love for basketball. So, yeah, "loves" is the verb there. Cool, right?
Everybody loves you!
everyone loves to tease me about my hair
The word "loves" can function as either a linking verb or an action verb, depending on how it is used in a sentence. As a linking verb, it connects the subject with a noun or adjective that renames or describes it (e.g., "She loves literature"). As an action verb, it shows the action of loving something or someone (e.g., "He loves his dog").
It is an action verb.
David does have a screename... it is davidakajustin1he loves all his fans to IM him.. he loves to hear from you
loves
before justin bieber but now she loves David Archuleta
David loves all animals <3
Kim le encanta David
The word 'she' is a subject pronoun. It is not difficult to work that out: just use the word in a pair of simple sentences, once as a subject and once as an object, and see which sounds right. 'She loves David.' 'David loves she.' The first sentence is right, the second is wrong. It would have to be 'David loves her.' 'Her' is the object pronoun.
That type of sentence is an interrogative sentence.
Oh, dude, the verb in that sentence is "loves." It's like the action word, you know, showing what Sam is all about, his love for basketball. So, yeah, "loves" is the verb there. Cool, right?
David tennant loves cookies because they taste good.
she loves david archuleta