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a group of words containing a subject and predicate
whats a pig got to do with anything, besides the way you look.
A group of words w/ a subject and a predicate is SENTENCE.Predicate is the one who describe the subject.Subject is the one who is talking about in the sentence.Ex:Leslly draw like a professional.The subject is Leslly and the predicate is proffesional.
In English grammar, the predicate is part of a sentence that modifies the subject. It may consist of a simple verb, or it may be a phrase or group of words containing a verb, all of which work together to modify the subject. *Examples, in which Jim is the subject of a sentence and the predicate is in italics:Jim runs.Jim runs fast.Jim runs too fast.*See related link for more detail.
A phrase is a group of related words without a subject and predicate, while a clause is a group of related words containing a subject and predicate. Clauses can stand alone as complete sentences, while phrases cannot.
This is called a phrase.
A group of words without a subject or predicate is a phrase.
To use a word group to make a complete sentence, you can start by ensuring that the word group contains a subject and a predicate. The subject is the noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, and the predicate is the verb that describes the action or tells something about the subject. Combine the subject and predicate to create a complete thought that conveys meaning.
This is known as a sentence fragment. It lacks either a subject, a predicate, or does not express a complete thought on its own. Sentence fragments can occur due to incomplete construction or lack of context.
A group of related words containing a subject and verb is called a clause. A clause can be independent (complete thought) or dependent (incomplete thought).
phrases
Complete Subject: Twelve hours Complete Predicate: Passed without a word from any of the group