A quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
An empty sentence is a sentence that say too little. The sentence maybe complete with all the right words in all the right places, but need ideas.
The complete subject in a sentence is the noun or pronoun along with any words that modify it. It includes the main noun or pronoun that the sentence is about and all the words that describe or modify it.
The complete predicate includes the main verb and all the words that modify or complete its meaning in a sentence. Look for the action or state of being that the subject is doing or being described by in a sentence, along with any additional words that are connected to it.
No. The sentence you are needing is "I think English is fun to learn" or "I think learning English is fun".
My best friend (All the words in the subject make up the complete subject.)
The subject in the sentence is "that little dog" and the predicate is "is following us to school." The complete subject includes all the words that identify the person, place, thing, or idea the sentence is about, while the complete predicate includes all the words that convey the action or state of being.
The complete predicate of a sentence is the predicate verb with all its modifiers. A simple predicate is an action word that tells something about the subject.
A complete predicate includes all the words in a sentence that describe what the subject does or is. It consists of the verb and all the words that modify or complement it, providing full information about the action or state of being. For example, in the sentence "The cat chased the mouse quickly," "chased the mouse quickly" is the complete predicate.
Typically, the complete predicate is merely that portion of a sentence including and following the verb. For example, in the sentenceThe boy chased the dog across the street.The complete subject would be "The boy," while the complete predicate would be "chased the dog across the street."
A simple subject is also a complete subject when it only contains one word.For instance: He went to the store. "He" is the only part of the subject at all. The rest of it is part of the complete predicate.
The sentence fragment, "CANNOT SAVE ALL OF THEM" is a predicate.A predicate is the verb and all of the words related to that verb.A simple predicate is the verb itself (save).A complete predicate is all of the words related to the verb (cannot save all of them).A sentence can have more than one predicate, for example:We cannot save all of them but if we move quickly, we can save some.
"Mom cooked dinner." is indeed a complete sentence. It contains all parts of a complete sentence.