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An adverb
Not usually, but sometimes. A complete predicate may include a "predicate adjective" that modifies the simple subject, as in the sentence, "She is pretty", in which "pretty" modifies the simple subject "she". However, this is by no means a necessary part of a predicate in general.
A simple predicate is only one word, so do not is not a simple predicate
Are you referring to the definition to be simple or the definition of "simple predicate"? Anyway, I'm thinking that you mean the former. A simple predicate is the word that shows what is happening. In the before sentence, is is the simple predicate. "is the word that shows what is happening" is the whole predicate. A verb will not always be the simple predicate, and simple predicates will not always be 1 word.
A simple predicate is a verb. Depends is a verb and can be used as the simple predicate of a sentence.
A simple predicate is a predicate containing a one word and a compound predicate contains a verb with two words
The KEY word in the predicate part of the sentence. It is not the WHOLE predicate. The simple predicate in a sentence is also known as the verb or verbs. The SIMPLE Predicate is not all the other words that are found in the predicate
No. 'It' is a simple subject.
A simple predicate is the main very that is in the predicate of a sentence. The simple predicate tells you what the subject is doing. An example is in the sentence My mom started the dryer, the word started is the simple predicate.
No. A simple predicate is just a verb. "Once" is not a verb.
No. The simple predicate would be one word and in this case, it is sting.
give The simple predicate is the verb or action word in the sentence.