Nouns as subjects
Noun as objects
Compound sentences
Complex sentences
Random
100

What is the subject noun in this sentence?
The dog ran.

Dog

100

Circle the object noun:
I threw the ball.

ball

100

What are conjunctions that are used in compound sentences? 

and, or, so

100

Name some sub coordinating conjunctions when using complex sentences. 

although, because, after, before

100

I’m full of holes, but I can still hold water. What am I?

A sponge

200

What is the subject noun?
Students read books.

Students

200

What is the object?
She read a book.

book

200

I like apples, ___ I like oranges.
(and/but/or)

and
200

Complete the sentence:
I was happy ___ I got a new puppy.

because

200

What has a tail and a head but no body?

A coin

300

What is the subject noun?
The teacher graded papers.

Teacher

300

Name the object noun:
Dad cooked dinner.

dinner

300

Make this a compound sentence:
I was tired. I finished my homework

I was tired,but I finished my homework

300

Choose the best beginning:
___ the bell rings, class starts. 

(When, Because, If)

When

300

What has keys but can’t open doors?

A piano

400

Identify the subject noun:
My brother washed the car.

Brother

400

Identify the object noun:
We built a sandcastle.

sandcastle

400

What conjuction goes best with the sentence.

You can read a book, ___ you can play a game

and

400

Turn it into a complex sentence with although:
He was sick. He went to school.

Although he was sick, he went to school.

400

What begins with “T,” ends with “T,” and has “T” in it?

A teapot

500

True or false: A subject is who or what the sentence is about. 

True

500

True or false: the object is who recieves the action?

True

500

Which conjunctions goes best with this sentence: We were hungry, ___ we made sandwiches.

so

500

Where does the subordinating conjunctions can be found in a sentence?

Beginning, middle or end

500

Which is heavier: a pound of feathers or a pound of bricks?

Neither—they both weigh a pound.

M
e
n
u