Yes, both the complete subject and the complete predicate of a sentence can contain adjectives. Adjectives can be used to describe the subject or the action of the predicate in a sentence.
She was quick to respond to the emergency situation.
You would capitalize "science" only if it is the first word in the sentence. Examples: Science is my niece's favorite subject. Ralph was always quick to answer, with answers not based in science.
No, the correct phrase is "You are a quick learner." "You are" is the correct way to start a sentence in this case since it is referring to the listener.
I am both a quick worker and a careful one.
Yes, both the complete subject and the complete predicate of a sentence can contain adjectives. Adjectives can be used to describe the subject or the action of the predicate in a sentence.
If you don't know you just made a sentence with the word quick.
The quick sly fox jumped over the lazy dog. Yes, it can.
I gave a quick answer, then left.
where am i ?
i had very quick reflexes
Bunch
She was quick to respond to the emergency situation.
Title case capitalizes the first letter of each word in a sentence, while sentence case only capitalizes the first letter of the first word in a sentence. For example, "The Quick Brown Fox" is in title case, whereas "The quick brown fox" is in sentence case.
He was quick on the draw.
Quick put out the fire!
They knew he was quick-tempered, so they were careful what they said so as not to annoy him.