Compound subjects and compound sentences.
Is this a compound sentence? John & Hary sang. Is
it truly necessary for an individual to present sentence into two separate clauses?
Wren and Martin grammar says that if a sentence with compound subject can be resolved into two independent clauses, it is a compound sentence. Why am I confused? How can I distinguish between simple sentences and compound subjects?
Why does your sentence form one complete idea?
Is the ‘compound subject’ an homogeneous subject?
What is compound sentence?
An independent clause is a clause that has a subject and verb and forms a complete thought. The example of a compound sentence is, “This house is too expensive and that house is too small. ” “Application
of ‘Flavorization ‘Letter from ‘Flavor of ‘Flavour” to the reader.: ‘By FLA ‘By FLA ‘Flavor of ‘Flavor of ‘Flavor of ‘Flavor of ‘Favor”
I found John and Harry sings well. What with John?
John sang.. and Harry sang well..
A lower-level distributive coordination like that in can be expanded to a logically equivalent mainclause one, as in ].
Which sentence is a compound sentence? X is a simple sentence with one subject, “John and Harry”, and the single predicate “sang
well” (see example).
I found John and Harry sings well. What with John?
John sang.. and Harry sang well..
A lower-level distributive coordination like that in can be expanded to a logically equivalent mainclause one, as in ].
Which sentence is a compound sentence? X is a simple sentence with one subject, “John and Harry”, and the single predicate “sang
well” (see example).
I found John and Harry sings well. What with John?
John sang.. and Harry sang well..
A lower-level distributive coordination like that in can be expanded to a logically equivalent mainclause one, as in ].
Which sentence is a compound sentence? X is a simple sentence with one subject, “John and Harry”, and the single predicate “sang
well” (see example).