My answer was wrong. Seeking truth is a verb-object phrase, not a subject-verb phrase. I apologize for the confusion I caused you by confusing the verb-object and the subject and verb phrases.
The context you provided is not very clear. I can't understand which sentence you are referring to. If you can provide more information or clarify what you want to know, I will try my best to help you answer your questions.
It could be based on real events or experiences that the subject shared. Maybe it's a fictional account inspired by something they mentioned.
It's hard to say exactly without more context. The subject might have told a funny incident and used the verb 'recount'. Or perhaps it was a sad event and the verb was 'lament'.
I'm not quite sure. It depends on the specific context and who the subject is.
It depends on the specific context. Sometimes the subject provides detailed descriptions, while in other cases, it might just give a brief mention.
I'm not sure exactly who coined it. But it's a phrase that's been around for a long time and has become widely used to express the idea that real-life events can be more surprising than made-up stories.
Sure. In the short story, 'The dog chases the cat.' 'Dog' is a singular subject and 'chases' is the singular verb form. This shows proper subject - verb agreement.
Some scientific discoveries can be stranger than fiction. Like quantum physics with its mind-bending concepts that seem impossible but are real.
The subject of this sentence was How Steel Was Tempered. The predicates were an autobiographical novel. - How is steel made? - Predicate: It's a - An autobiographical novel
The smoke was usually related to rats because rats were one of the main sources of smoke. In traditional Chinese culture, rats are considered one of the twelve zodiac animals, so the smoke from the chimneys may also represent the rat zodiac. However, the specific zodiac that it represented still needed to be determined according to the story or background.