A complete subject and predicate are more thorough than simple subjects and predicates. A complete subject includes the entire group of words discussing the subject, while the complete predicate consists of the words left in a sentence after the complete subject is removed.
What is the complete predicate of the sentence below? Looking up from his computer monitor, Jason mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone. A. picked up the phone B. mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone. C. mopped his brow D. Looking up from his computer monitor, -- mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone.
What is the compound subject and compound predicate in this sentance?
My prefered subject is english literature.
The complete subject includes all of the words in the subject, and the complete predicate includes all of the words in the predicate...
many interested students read the advertisement for working boys.
We cannot answer this question because you did not tell us which sentence you are asking about.
The microscopic dust mite was burried in the closet.
the part of a sentence or clause that tell what what subject is doing or what the subject is
You can have two simple subjects and two simple predicates.
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All sentences must have a predicate and a subject. Subjects and predicates are part of all sentences. Predicates can go before or after a subject of a sentence.
A fragment is a sentence that isn't a complete sentence. Example: I have. *or* I Like. They both have subjects and verbs but no predicates.
The subject of a sentence is the object, person, animal, or thing you are talking about in a sentence. (This is not to be confused with appositives, which is a further definition of a subject, usually separated by a comma on either side of it.) The predicate of a sentence is what is being said about the subject in the sentence, and it is always a verb (this includes is, am, are, has, have, had, was). Here is an example sentence: Betty danced onto the stage. In the preceding sentence, "Betty" is the subject, and "danced" is the predicate. Occasionally the order of subject-predicate can be flipped. Here is an example: On to the stage danced Betty. In a sentence there can also be multiple subjects and predicates. Here is an example: Billy and Joel and Mary and Alexis raced and chased each other at recess. In the preceding sentence the subjects are "Billy", "Joel", "Mary", and "Alexis". The predicates are "raced" and "chased".
add a predicate to a word weaving baskets
Subjects are the main noun of the sentence. Predicates, or verbs, tell what the subject is doing.
You can have two simple subjects and two simple predicates.
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subjects and predicates
Simple subjects and predicates.
Simple subjects and predicates.
Subjects are the main noun of the sentence. Predicates, or verbs, tell what the subject is doing.
Yes, a sentence can have two complete predicates, for example:I washed the dishes and mopped the floor.
žComplete predicates are all the other words besides the subject and its modifiers.
All sentences must have a predicate and a subject. Subjects and predicates are part of all sentences. Predicates can go before or after a subject of a sentence.
If you are talking about predicates it is simple. If you are talking about subjects it is compound.