The subject of this sentence is this.
"Why do we have eyebrows?"
What is "we"?
This is the verb phrase in this sentence:
"Why do we have eyebrows?"
What is "do have"?
This is one adjective from the sentence:
"The grasshopper will hop around the new-mown mead."
What is "the" or "new-mown"?
This is the predicate adjective in the sentence:
"Will the second-string player be a starter tonight instead?"
What is "starter"?
This is how many prepositional phrases the following sentence has:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
What is "three"?
This is the subject of the sentence:
"Keep your fingers out of your eyes."
What is "you"?
This is the predicate verb of the sentence:
"Keep your fingers out of your eyes."
What is "keep"?
This is the adverb in this sentence:
"The poetry of earth and sky is never dead."
What is "never"?
This is the predicate adjective in the sentence:
"Unfortunately, the new Colts quarterback might be hurt."
What is "hurt"?
This is an adverbial prepositional phrase in the following sentence:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
What is "at ease" or "beneath some pleasant weed"?
This is the subject of the sentence:
"The Latin word for eyelash is cilia."
What is "word"?
This is the verb in the sentence:
"The Latin word for eyelash is cilia."
What is "is"?
This many adjectives are in the sentence:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
What is four or five?
This is the predicate nominative in the sentence:
"Are those pebbles from the box igneous rocks?"
What is "rocks"?
This is an adjectival prepositional phrase in the following sentence:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
What is "of the grasshopper"?
This is the subject of the sentence:
"Wow, your pupils are so tiny!"
What is "pupils"?
This is the type of verb in the sentence:
"The Latin word for eyelash is cilia."
What is "linking verb"?
These are all the adjectives in the sentence:
"Are those pebbles from the box igneous rocks?"
What are "those", "the", and "igneous"?
This is the predicate adjective in the sentence:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
What is "quiet"?
This is a diagram of the sentence:
"At ease, the wings of the grasshopper are quiet beneath some pleasant weed."
This is the subject of the sentence:
"Are those pebbles from the box igneous rocks?"
What is "pebbles"?
This is the verb phrase for the sentence:
"In the cave, will the bats be hanging together underneath the canopy?"
What is "will be hanging"?
These are the two adverbs in the sentence:
"Will the second-string player be a starter tonight instead?"
What are "tonight" and "instead"?
This is the direct object in the sentence:
"Peggy and Marge read a book about the gold rush of 1849."
What is "book"?
This is a diagram of the sentence:
"Are those pebbles from the box igneous rocks?"