Uhhhhh ok.
Guy walks in the house, a guest that is invited over to cook the lunch for today and brings some wine with him as a drink. Guy starts cooking and goes to go set food down on the table, Wife comes into the kitchen, guy falls and drops the lunch all over the floor. The wife gets mad and start yelling. The husband comes and tells the wife its okay, they work it out, and the guest cooks the food again and cleans up. They set up the table and food, sit down, and enjoy thwir afternoon eating and chatting about their day.
The phrase <em>the antique fire truck </em>is used as a complete subject, because you are including all of these words to form a subject, so it cannot be a simple one (just one word). It isn't a compound subject either, because that would be two or more words connected with a conjunction <em>and, </em>or some other one.
I think that it is condition/ heatstroke but not sure
It is called the third person or the Omniscient. <span> To present Beowulf's thoughts, for instance, the narrator adopts the point of view of an omniscient author and gives us a glimpse into Beowulf's mind; or he causes Beowulf to reveal his private thoughts by having him declare them through a public utterance. In either case, a reader's attention is directed toward Beowulf. </span>
What passages? I can't answer this for you because I can't read the passages.