No. The predicate of the sentence is objective and, therefore, the correct pronoun would be 'me'.
The predicate part of the sentence tells what the subject does or has. It can also describe what the subject is or is like.
A sentence has a subject and predicate.
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
An active verb is required; any other part of speech may be present.
The predicate of being right is wrong !
The parts of predicate are all the words in a sentence except the subject.
Stop is a verb, and as a word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is part of a sentence that makes a statement about a/the subject. In this case if 'stop' was part of a full clause then it would be the simple predicate. However, the predicate is anything that makes a statement about the subject of a sentence.
No. The part of a sentence after the subject is the predicate'Boys were absent yesterday. The part of the sentence following the subject, written in bold, is the predicate.
A predicate is the action, or verb part of a sentence. Therefore a substitute of the word predcate is verb.
The predicate of the sentence is the part of a sentence that includes the verb and the words following it. The predicate pronoun is any pronoun that is part of the predicate (for personal pronouns, use the objective case). Examples:Direct object of the verb: John droveit like a pro.Indirect object of the verb: We gave her a party.Object of the preposition: Mary made a cake for me.Note that a subjective pronoun when it is the subject of a clause can be part of a predicate; for example:Mary brought a cake she made for the party.OBJECTIVEPERSONALPRONOUNSmeusyouhimheritthemREFLEXIVEPRONOUNSmyselfourselvesyourselfhimselfherselfthemselvesPOSSESSIVEPRONOUNSmineoursyourshishersitstheirs
That part of the sentence is officially known as the predicate.
The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells what the subject is or does. It typically includes the verb and any additional information about the subject's action or state.