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The complement "upset" in this sentence is functioning as a subject complement. It describes the state or condition of the subject, Sidney, after the action in the question (teasing) was performed by the subject (you).
indirect obj
indirect obj
The past tense form of 'upset' is upset. There is no upsut or upsat. Its literally just 'upset'.
The past tense of upset is upset.
predicate adjective A+
A plus= predicate adjective
yes yes it did :P u smart a**
The complement "upset" in this sentence is functioning as a subject complement. It describes the state or condition of the subject, Sidney, after the action in the question (teasing) was performed by the subject (you).
indirect obj
indirect obj
no just like any other star athlete he got upset
someone who never seems to get upset and always keeps their cool even in trying circumstances. someone who is not bothered by teasing or ridicule and wont get upset or fight when made fun of, and so on, basically someone who wont retaliate quickly.
upset: "I was upset." "He was upset." "He and I were both upset." "I upset him." ect
The comparative of upset is more upset; the superlative is most upset.
It depends on what you mean by "playing." If you mean having one for a pet where you treat it nicely and have plenty of food and water, then it can be healthy to have a pet, yes. If you mean teasing it and making it upset, then that's not good for the salamander and can make you a meaner person because it's being a bully.
I had an upset stomach. He upset me greatly.