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"I felt much better" has a subject complement.
There is no subject complement in this sentence. In this sentence "felt" is a transitive action verb with "pulse" being a direct object, receiving the action of the verb.To have a subject complement in the sentence, "felt" would have to function as a linking verb. Example: The patient's pulse felt rapid. (In this case "rapid" is a predicate adjective describing the subject "pulse"; "rapid" is the subject complement.)
B: I felt much better.
In the sentence 'She replied that she felt better' yes, felt is a correct form in this sentence.
No. The verb "feel" may be a linking word in some cases, but it is not one in this sentence. True linking verbs are forms of the following verbs: be, seem, and become. Other verbs, like feel, may be linking verbs if they are functionally equivalent to the verb to be. Example: "John feels embarrassed" is the same as "John is embarrassed" and in this case "embarrassed" would be the subject complement. In the above question, however, "The nurse felt your pulse" is not functionally equivalent to "The nurse is your pulse" or "The nurse seems your pulse" and so there is no subject complement in this sentence.
"Felt" can function as either a linking verb or an action verb, depending on its context. When used as a linking verb, it connects the subject of the sentence with a subject complement that describes or renames it (e.g., "I felt tired"). When used as an action verb, it describes a physical or mental sensation experienced by the subject (e.g., "I felt the soft fabric").
Guy is the simple subject.
In that sentence, felt is a linking verb. It connects the subject, Rosemary, to the predicate adjective, sick.
The man's suavity made the woman felt better.
I drank the healing elixir and immediately felt better.
The pronoun in the sentence is he, the subjective case functioning as the subject of the sentence.
Intransitive verbs are verbs that do not require a direct object to complete their meaning. To identify an intransitive verb of incomplete predication, look for a verb that does not need an object to make sense but still needs a complement to complete the meaning of the sentence. An example is "He seems tired," where "seems" is the intransitive verb with incomplete predication, and "tired" is the complement.