lucie hong - the first part of the sentence is correct (John drove a car). The second part of the sentence is missing something an article - it should be "before the sun set".
If you are referring to his habits I would recommend: “John *always* drove *his* car before sunsets” If you’re referring to a specific event I would recommend “John drove a car before *sunset.” (No “s” at the end) The difference between ‘sunset’ and ‘the sun set’ has to do with whether you are referring to a time of day (sunset) or an event (the setting of the sun).
Complements are usually used to further explain a subject or an object to complete the meaning of something. An example would be "Sheila is a professor". In this sentence, Sheila is the subject, is is the verb, and professor is a subject complement.
Ma'am, I have some doubtful idioms. Would you like to clear them? Please try to let me know by replying. I hope you will try to reply as soon as possible. I will be looking forward to your reply.
@@LynettePretoriusMonash Madam, my first doubtful idiom is; "Walk on air". What does it mean? How to use it in a sentence? Please try to make me understand about it by means of some particular examples.
This video describes the basic sentence structure in English. English has quite a rigid sentence structure which is subject - verb - object. That is why the sentence examples are short: it gives you a clear indication of each of these components of the sentence. If you want to write longer sentences, you need to use clauses. You can find out more about writing complex sentences using clauses here: th-cam.com/video/LTrb1mY0Qf4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for this nice presentation. Your explanation is very clear and easy to understand.
You are welcome!
I love the clear way you explain! Thank you so much!
You are welcome! :)
A mi también
It is useful👍
Thank you so much! This helps me for my English test a lot!
You are welcome :) I am glad it is useful.
You are good teacher for all
Thank you for your clear explanation ma’am
Love from India 🇮🇳 ♥️
My pleasure 😊
Helpful! I'll show this to some of my English students. Thanks
You are welcome, I'm glad you found it useful.
Awesome
Its helping me for online school
Hi im from indonssia
Nice 👍 👌 😯 😍 .
Thanks 🤗
Great video! Could you update it to include subject-verb-noun sentences as well? Ex: “They are friends.”
Good!
Thanks!
Perfect. Thank you very much.
Thank you teach to me 😄😄
Thanks 👍
❤❤ from Budapest hungary 🇭🇺
Thank you so much ma'am
You are welcome :)
I LIKE THIS VIDEO
I love it
I have a question
"John drove a car before sunsets "Is this a right sentence?
lucie hong - the first part of the sentence is correct (John drove a car). The second part of the sentence is missing something an article - it should be "before the sun set".
Thank you
If you are referring to his habits I would recommend: “John *always* drove *his* car before sunsets”
If you’re referring to a specific event I would recommend “John drove a car before *sunset.” (No “s” at the end)
The difference between ‘sunset’ and ‘the sun set’ has to do with whether you are referring to a time of day (sunset) or an event (the setting of the sun).
thank you so much
You are welcome :)
thx for my test so much
You are welcome! :)
ICT- Yahanadi meeye.👋
He run slowly - sv adverbs
Thank you for much
You are welcome :)
here cause of tomorrow’s test? lol
Video
why "complement" is not mentioned here?
Complements are usually used to further explain a subject or an object to complete the meaning of something. An example would be "Sheila is a professor". In this sentence, Sheila is the subject, is is the verb, and professor is a subject complement.
Ma'am, I have some doubtful idioms. Would you like to clear them? Please try to let me know by replying. I hope you will try to reply as soon as possible. I will be looking forward to your reply.
I can tryt o help - please post them here and I'll see if I can answer the questions.
@@LynettePretoriusMonash Madam, my first doubtful idiom is; "Walk on air". What does it mean? How to use it in a sentence? Please try to make me understand about it by means of some particular examples.
@@LynettePretoriusMonash The next one is; "In black and white".
@@LynettePretoriusMonash The next one is; "In the red".
@@LynettePretoriusMonash The next one is; "In the black".
POV: You're here because your English language teacher sent u
Посоны 7С ван лав энд ай лав еверибоди
Hi
Joking
How come no english techers add sentences longer than a three to four word sentence?
This video describes the basic sentence structure in English. English has quite a rigid sentence structure which is subject - verb - object. That is why the sentence examples are short: it gives you a clear indication of each of these components of the sentence. If you want to write longer sentences, you need to use clauses. You can find out more about writing complex sentences using clauses here: th-cam.com/video/LTrb1mY0Qf4/w-d-xo.html
@@LynettePretoriusMonash Ok, thank you very much for answering my question.
Robux pls robux robux
No entendí ni vrg no se inglés