A noun can not be part of a simple predicate, because a simple predicate only includes the verb phrase.
The complete predicate, however, may contain nouns, because it includes the verb phrase and any of its objects (Direct and Indirect - which can be nouns and pronouns) and modifiers (which may include adverbial and adjective phrases -- prepositional phrases which have noun or pronoun objects).
A simple sentence is made up of a subject (usually a noun) and a predicate (usually a verb).
It is. This is a sample of a simple predicate. There is no predicate noun, adjective or adverb.
A simple subject and simple predicate are the two main parts of each sentence. A simple subject is the common pronoun, noun, or proper noun that tells who the sentence is about. A simple predicate is the verb in the sentence that acts on the subject.
Were is a verb. Part of the verb "To Be". Is Are Were Was be been ***A predicate is a noun with a verb. Such as Sally slept here. Here is the predicate of the verb slept. Sally is the subject.
Can is a modal verb. It is not a predicate or part of predicate until it is used in a sentence.I can see you - can see you = the predicate. can = simple predicate
A predicate noun is a a sub category inside a noun, which is a part of speech itself. It is simply a noun in the predicate.
a simple predicate is a verb and simple subject is a noun
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 keep/keeps is a verb One word is not a predicate, a predicate is the verb plus noun or noun phrase.
"MrJones", presumably a proper noun for the spelling of which the questioner is responsible, is the simple subject, and the simple predicate is "is".
The simple predicate is the key word in the predicate or verb part of the sentence. It is not the entire predicate because then it wouldn't be simple. The simple predicate in a sentence is also known as the verb or verbs. The simple predicate is only the main verb.
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.