Want this question answered?
A compound sentence has to have two complete thoughts, each with a separate subject and predicate. It also has to have a conjunction that joins or relates them to each other.
Every sentence has two things: a subject and a predicate (verb). When you are asked to give the predicate of a sentence, they probably want the complex predicate. If they ask for the simple predicate, that's another matter. Here is an example.The small dog named Lady walked across the street.In the sentence above, the complex subject is "The small dog named Lady"- it's everything that has to do with what the sentence is about. The complex predicate is "walked across the street. "- everything that has to do with what the subject is doing.The simple subject is just the bare minimum of information, without any description at all. In this case, it would be "Lady." The simple predicate is just the verb that's doing all the action- in this sentence, "walked."So to give a sentence with a simple predicate and predicate, you simply have to identify what is the active verb (simple predicate), and what else is associated with the verb (predicate).Happy hunting,Inky
First, the "predicate" is just another name for the verb, the word that shows the action in a sentence. Every sentence needs a subject (the person, place or thing doing the action) and a predicate (the action word that tells what the subject has done). The simple predicate is usually the main verb in a sentence. For example: Jerry ran to catch the bus. The subject is Jerry. The word that tells what he did is "ran" and that is the simple predicate.
Jake and Katie is the simple subject. Go is the simple predicate
A predicate adjective is a type of adjective that describes the subject of a linking verb that it follows. It follows the linking verb in the sentence, and then refers back to it.
The predicate states what the subject does, is doing, or has done in a sentence.
A subject and a predicate.
The subject is "name" and the predicate is "is".
The main rule is that the subject and predicate must agree in number. If the subject is singular, the predicate should be singular, and if the subject is plural, the predicate should be plural as well. Additionally, the subject and predicate must agree in person - if the subject is in first person, the predicate should also be in first person, and so on.
example of sentence complete subject and complete predicate Listening=subject is not=complete predicate
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 is made up of two parts, a subject and a predicate. The subject is the subject of the sentence, and the predicate is the verb.
Every sentence has a subject, what the sentence is about, and a predicate, what tells something about the subject. In this sentence, the subject is "cat" and the predicate is "content."
A sentence has a subject and predicate.
A sentence is made up of two parts, a subject and a predicate. The subject is the subject of the sentence, and the predicate is the verb.
two parts of a sentence are: 1. subject and 2. predicate
The subject is what acts upon the predicate.