Finding the Subject of a Sentence

May 31st, 2026 in Grammar by 0

All grammatically complete sentences, except for imperative sentences, contain stated subjects of verbs. Subjects may be singular or compound but must agree with the verb.

Examples:

Virginia and Maryland are in the east.

The boy and the girl went to see a movie.

The boy stayed after school.

The man went to the store to buy some milk.

To identify the grammatical subject of the sentence, find the verb and use the verb in a question, beginning with who or what.

Example: The two dogs in the cage barked.

Verb: barked

Who or what barked? The dogs barked.

Subject: dogs

Generally, subjects precede verbs in sentences. Common exceptions to this pattern are (1) when subjects are used in questions and (2) after the expletive there.

Examples:

Was the statement true? (verb + subject)
Did these refugees survive? (auxiliary [helping] verb + subject + verb)
There were no objections. (expletive + verb + subject)

Expletive – A signal of transformation in the structure of the sentence without changing the meaning. The expletive there shifts the order of subject and verb in the sentence.

An imperative is a command or request. The subject you is understood in the sentence.

Example: (You) Take the garbage out of the house, please.

Try It!

Locate the subjects in the following sentences

  1. The children went outside to play after they finished their homework.
  2. Where were you this afternoon when I tried to call you?
  3. For our vacation, we are going to the beach.
  4. Last year, it rained a lot in April.
  5. My favorite holiday is Christmas because I love the giving nature it brings out in people.

Answers:

  1. children
  2. you
  3. we
  4. it

holiday