Well a compound predicate is one or more verbs or verb phrase.
The two parts of a complete sentence are the subject and predicate. The subject contains a noun, the predicate a verb. "My dog died." Subject = My dog Predicate = died
Just a little spelling first. The sentence should be written, "What is the definition of a predicate nominative?"Predicate refers to belonging or being, such as the verbs is, are, were, etc.Nominative refers to a noun.There are predicate adjectives, such as "The sky was grey." The predicate adjective grey describes the subject sky.Or predicate nominatives, such as "John and I are musicians" or "It is I." The predicate nominative is a noun or pronoun which refers to, or is a substitute for, the subject.
The predicate is the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject
The subject is "name" and the predicate is "is".
There is not a predicate noun in this sentence. The definition of a predicate noun is that it defines or restates the subject AND it has to follow a linking verb. example:Mrs.Smith is a nurse. the predicate noun would be nurse
That is a correct definition, however some details could be added:A subject pronoun is a pronoun used as the subject of a verb and as a predicate nominative following a linking verb.
The cat (subject) slept peacefully (predicate). Sarah (subject) enjoys reading books (predicate). The sun (subject) shone brightly (predicate). The children (subject) played in the park (predicate). The teacher (subject) explained the lesson (predicate).
you is subject thank is predicate
it is a predicate
A subject and a predicate.
Subject predicate.