I would need the passage to help
Movies is a simple subject and produced, directed are compound predicates in the given sentence "Movies are neither produced nor directed like stage shows."
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What Is the Simple Subject?</h3>
We must comprehend the components of a phrase in order to comprehend what a simple subject is.
A subject and a predicate can be found in any sentence. A sentence's subject is the subject of the sentence. The portion of the sentence that has the verb is referred to as the predicate.
A noun or a noun phrase can be found in the subject, but nouns can also be found in the predicate. How then do you distinguish between them?
The subject is the noun or noun phrase that is "doing" the verb.
Let's examine a subject and predicate example. The predicate is highlighted, and the subject is in bold.
The man run to the shop.
The predicate is the word "run" and everything that comes after it. The sentence is not about predicate nouns like "shop" in this case. The subject is the man because he is the one who is running.
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You want a genitive form here; and the genitive form of "park" is "park's" - so the correct option is b.
it would also be possible to create a composite noun: park gate
Thoreau relates time to a stream, "I drink at the stream; but while I drink I see the sandy bottom and detect how shallow it is."
The quotations marks (" ") make reference what Thoreau says.
The commas and the semi colons give the reader a better comprehension about what author is saying and feeling.
The other options put wrong puntuactions, which make the reader can confuse about what he is reading
Two Question
The unnecessary adjective is varied;
Many is a quantifier article
Are and offer are verbs
College and courses are nouns.
The only adjective is varied and also it is redundant in the sentence