huddled
The sentence is one of those that seems confusing because of all the prepositional phrases:
in the middle
of the box
of the litter
Also the subject comes after the predicate in this one but once you find the subject (kitten), you can ask, 'What did the kitten do?' A: huddled
The simple predicate in the sentence "In the middle of the box huddled the smallest kitten of the litter" is "huddled." The simple predicate refers to the main verb or action of the subject, which in this case is the action performed by the smallest kitten.
The simple predicate is 'huddled'.
In the sentence "In the middle of the box huddled the smallest kitten of the litter," the complete predicate is "huddled the smallest kitten of the litter." The complete predicate includes the verb "huddled" along with all the words that provide additional information about the action and the subject.
The simple predicate is 'huddled'.
huddled The sentence is one of those that seems confusing because of all the prepositional phrases: in the middle of the box of the litter Also the subject comes after the predicate in this one but once you find the subject (kitten), you can ask, 'What did the kitten do?' A: huddled
The simple predicate is 'huddled'.
huddled
kitten
the whiskers on
The predicate is, "likes the ball of yarn."
"The whiskers on your kitten" is the subject of the sentence, and "twitch" is the predication.
My kitten is drinking milk :)