Put a guitar in his hand and white men can in fact jump
a sentence that tells a fact is a declarative sentence
the danger was obvious
A subject in a sentence is who, what, or where the sentence is about.
It is a fact that students who do not do their own homework do not learn the lessons.
What is the subject of this sentence? She was the subject of an investigation.
Use "is" after a prepositional phrase that refers to a singular subject and "are" after a prepositional phrase that refers to a plural subject. For example, "The book on the table is mine" (singular subject - book) or "The flowers in the garden are beautiful" (plural subject - flowers).
Yes, a pronoun can be the subject of a sentence. In fact, pronouns often serve as the subject in sentences to replace nouns and avoid repetition. For example, in the sentence "She is going to the store," "she" is the subject pronoun.
The grammatical term for 'fact' is a noun. In a sentence, 'fact' functions as a subject, object, or complement.
you use it like this math is my favorite subject
A sentence using the word subject: My favorite subject in school was Science.
That fact is irrelevant in this case! Your opinion is not a fact. The fact of the matter remains undiscovered.
You use shopping as a subject in a sentence like this: "Shopping is my paradise!" or "Shopping costs a lot of money."
Use is a verb so it usually comes after a subject however in an imperative sentence the verb comes first (there is no subject - the subject is implied)Use your head!
this subject is really bad
"I have a problem." "I" is used when the first person is the subject of the sentence.
If you use 'you and he' as the subject of the sentence, it is correct: You and he will meet when we get to the restaurant.