Subject Identification:
"They" is the subject of the sentence, as it performs the action (knew).
"Both" is an adjective modifying "they," emphasizing the duo.
The subject is who/what the sentence is about.
Here, "they" (the duo) knew each other.
"Zaira" is the subject of the sentence because:
It is the doer of the action (the one who loves).
It answers the question: "Who loves raw mangoes?"
The subject is the person or thing doing the action — here, Raju is performing the action "went back".
So, Raju is the correct subject of the sentence.
The subject of a sentence is the doer of the action.
In this sentence, "teacher" is the one who teaches, so it's the subject.
Subject: The teacher
Verb: teaches
Object/Complement: in the class
Beside means بغل میں
Besides means کے علاوہ
He teaches Urdu besides English وہ انگریزی کے علاوہ اردو بھی پڑھاتے ہیں
With "I," we always use "don't", and "question" matches singular "this."
Proper subject-verb agreement ensures that singular subjects have singular verbs and plural subjects have plural verbs.
In the sentence, "much" and "little" are quantitative adjectives as they describe the amount or quantity of effort and work, respectively, without specifying exact numbers.
Quantitative adjectives answer "how much" or "how many."
The subject is the doer of the action, and in this sentence, "the drummer" is performing the action of hurling.
Phrases like "After the final speech" and "at the crowd" are prepositional phrases.
The dogs bark loudly.
"The dogs" is a plural subject, so it needs a plural verb "bark" to match.
"I" is the subject acting as meeting.
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