Foundational Literacy•Oral English & Grammar
Subject and Verb: Who Does What?
Learn to identify the subject and verb in a sentence.
10 min
🎯 What You'll Learn
You will learn to find the subject (who) and the verb (what they do) in a sentence.
🌟 Let's Start
Every sentence is like a tiny story. It tells you WHO does WHAT. "Funke sings." Who? Funke. What does she do? She sings. That is the subject and the verb!
📚 New Concept
The subject is the person or thing doing the action. The verb is the action word.
- "Tunde runs fast." Subject: Tunde. Verb: runs.
- "The dog barks loudly." Subject: The dog. Verb: barks.
- "My mother cooks dinner." Subject: My mother. Verb: cooks.
- "The children play football." Subject: The children. Verb: play.
- "Rain falls from the sky." Subject: Rain. Verb: falls.
To find the subject: Ask "Who or what is doing something?"
To find the verb: Ask "What are they doing?"
The subject usually comes first, and the verb comes after it.
🎮 Let's Practice
- "Amina eats breakfast." What is the subject? What is the verb?
- "The bird flies high." What is the subject? What is the verb?
- Make a sentence with the subject "Chidi" and the verb "reads."
Click to see answers
- Subject: Amina. Verb: eats.
- Subject: The bird. Verb: flies.
- "Chidi reads a book every evening." (or any sentence with Chidi as subject and reads as verb)
💡 Remember
Every sentence needs a subject (who) and a verb (what they do). Find them by asking: "Who is doing something?" and "What are they doing?"