correctly identify the subject and complete verb in the sentence:

I should have taken more Caribbean literature courses

One of our subscribers wrote a letter of complaint about the magazines quality

Your tickets will be sent to you by the first week of November

Bram stoker is best known for his novel Dracula

#1. Subject: I

verb: should have taken

#4. subject: Bram Stoker
verb: is

Now you try the others. A good first step is to eliminate all preopositional phrases, since they cannot be nouns or verbs.

Subject and verb in the sentence "I should have taken more Caribbean literature courses":

Subject: I
Verb: should have taken

Subject and verb in the sentence "One of our subscribers wrote a letter of complaint about the magazine's quality":

Subject: One of our subscribers
Verb: wrote

Subject and verb in the sentence "Your tickets will be sent to you by the first week of November":

Subject: Your tickets
Verb: will be sent

Subject and verb in the sentence "Bram Stoker is best known for his novel Dracula":

Subject: Bram Stoker
Verb: is known

Sure! Let's break down each sentence to identify the subject and complete verb.

1. Subject: "I"
Complete Verb: "should have taken"

2. Subject: "One of our subscribers"
Complete Verb: "wrote"

3. Subject: "Your tickets"
Complete Verb: "will be sent"

4. Subject: "Bram Stoker"
Complete Verb: "is best known"

In sentence 1, the subject is "I" and the complete verb is "should have taken."

In sentence 2, the subject is "One of our subscribers" and the complete verb is "wrote."

In sentence 3, the subject is "Your tickets" and the complete verb is "will be sent."

In sentence 4, the subject is "Bram Stoker" and the complete verb is "is best known."

By identifying the subject and complete verb in each sentence, we can analyze the sentence structure and make accurate identifications.

subject tickets

verb sent