Edward Boys has written: 'Sermons' -- subject- s -: English Sermons, Sermons, English
Boys and Girls
jersey boys theme
Yes. All sentences in English have a subject, although in some cases the subject is implied/understood. Examples- declarative: "You kiss boys." interrogative: "You kiss boys?" or "Do you kiss boys?" exclamatory: "You kiss boys!" command: "Kiss boys." In all of these, the subject is 'you'; 'kiss' is the verb and 'boys' is a direct object ('do' is a helping verb, so when used, it is part of the verb form). Even though there is no 'you' in the command sentence, it is understood that the subject is the person to whom the sentence is spoken, which is... you.
The boys in my class don't listen to the teacher. In this sentence 'boys' is the simple subject (the subject does the action - verb) 'The boys in my class' is the complete subject. The complete subject of a sentence contains the simple subject (usually a noun or a pronoun) and all the words and phrases that go with it. Another example: The man carrying the suitcase tripped on the step. Man is the simple subject. 'The man carrying the suitcase' is the complete subject. Tripped is the verb
45 boys are in the class
Boys make up 40% of the class (12 boys out of 30 total students).
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a class of 25 students has 10 boys. Three boys have braces and 4 girls have braces..what is the ratio of boys with braces to boys in class
To find the fraction of the class that are boys, you would divide the number of boys by the total number of students in the class. In this case, there are 12 boys and 16 girls, so a total of 12 + 16 = 28 students in the class. Therefore, the fraction of the class that are boys is 12/28, which simplifies to 3/7. So, 3/7 of the class are boys.
No, each one of the boys is a single boy, so the subject is single and needs a single verb. It should be "Each of the boys plays cricket." It would, however, be correct to say "All of the boys play cricket", because "all of the boys" is a plural subject.
Grammitically correct, it can be either. The first is a statement that He meaning a person, is one of the tallest boys in the class. Period. The second is a question, as if saying, IS he one of the taller boys in the class? Grammitically correct, it can be either. The first is a statement that He meaning a person, is one of the tallest boys in the class. Period. The second is a question, as if saying, IS he one of the taller boys in the class?