a starfish can regrow a part of its body
subject-starfish
predicate-regrow
declarative sentence
A nominative case (subjective) pronoun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause and as a predicate nominative.
Favorite is a noun in that sentence.
A compound subject consists of two or more subjects that share the same predicate in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "Tom and Jerry run fast," both "Tom" and "Jerry" are the subjects, and they share the predicate "run fast." This structure allows for more concise sentences while conveying information about multiple subjects simultaneously.
A word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is a portion of a sentence which can consist of one or more words. "Am" is a verb. It is possible that when "am" is used in a sentence that "am" will be the predicate of the sentence, for example: "Are you the chosen one? I am."
You can have more than one simple subject in a sentence
its a predicate
A compound subject is when two or more subjects share the same predicate in a sentence. For example, "John and Sarah went to the store." The simple predicate is the main verb in the sentence that shows the action or state of being of the subject. In the example sentence, "went" is the simple predicate.
The complete subject is "The last essay question". The complete predicate is "was really challenging".
The predicate is the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to it. A sentence may have more than one predicate. The predicate answers what the subject is or what the subject does.
1) Samantha and Mady collected seashells then cleaned them.Samantha and Mady are the subjects. The compound predicate that is collected and cleaned is telling you what they both did.2) The mayor and his brother were arrested and thrown into jail.The subjects are the mayor and his brother. The predicate says that they were both arrested, and that both were thrown into jail.
Yes. Example: "Tim and Jacob walked for half an hour." Tim and Jacob are both subjects.