Topic Details (Notes format)

Sentence Structure: Subject, Verb, Object

Subject: English

Book: English Grammar

A basic English sentence often follows **Subject → Verb → Object**. If you imagine a little story: “Who did what, and to what?”

### Subject
- The doer of the action.
- Example: “**The dog** chased the ball.” Here, “The dog” is the subject.

### Verb
- The action or state of being.
- Example: “The dog **chased** the ball.” “Chased” is the verb.

### Object
- The thing/person that the verb affects.
- Example: “The dog chased **the ball**.” The ball is what got chased, so it’s the object.

### Kid-Friendly Breakdown
- “**I** (subject) **eat** (verb) **pizza** (object).”
- “**Sam** (subject) **built** (verb) **a tower** (object).”

Without these parts in order, a sentence may sound confusing. For instance, “Built Sam a tower” is missing clarity unless we reorder it properly.
Think of it like a mini play: the subject (actor), does something (verb), to something (object). Once you know that pattern, you can create countless sentences!