No, "did not" is not a simple predicate; it is a compound verb phrase. A simple predicate consists of the main verb or verb phrase without any auxiliary verbs or modifiers. In this case, "did" serves as an auxiliary verb, while "not" negates the action of the main verb that would follow. For example, in the sentence "She did not go," the simple predicate is "go."
No. It might be a complete predicate in "The boy ran quickly."The simple predicate is only the verb and any helping verbs it uses, not adverbs.Examples:The cow has been milked today. (simple predicate: has been milked)The man is walking to the store. (simple predicate: is walking).The man enjoys jogging. (simple predicate: enjoys; jogging is a gerund/noun)
No.
Yes, "may" can function as a simple predicate in a sentence. A simple predicate consists of the main verb or verb phrase that tells what the subject does. For example, in the sentence "She may leave," "may leave" is the simple predicate, indicating the action the subject is considering.
Simple Predicate: sits
A verb is the action word or the being word in a sentence. A verb is a simple predicate.A predicate is the verb and all of the words that follow that are related to that verb.A sentence may have two or more predicates.Examples:Who has the tickets? (simple predicate 'has', complete predicate 'has the tickets')Jack does. (simple predicate only)Jack, pass out the tickets and keep one for yourself. (two simple predicates 'pass' and 'keep'; two complete predicates 'pass out the tickets' and 'keep one for yourself')Does everyone have their ticket? (simple predicate 'have'; complete predicate 'have their ticket)Yes, we do. (simple predicate only)
A simple predicate is only one word, so do not is not a simple predicate
A simple predicate is the main very that is in the predicate of a sentence. The simple predicate tells you what the subject is doing. An example is in the sentence My mom started the dryer, the word started is the simple predicate.
Simple Subject= You Simple predicate= waited
finished is the answer its a simple predicate.
Can is a modal verb. It is not a predicate or part of predicate until it is used in a sentence.I can see you - can see you = the predicate. can = simple 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
Complete predicate: is eating a simple supperSimple predicate: is eating
The simple predicate is the key word in the predicate or verb part of the sentence. It is not the entire predicate because then it wouldn't be simple. The simple predicate in a sentence is also known as the verb or verbs. The simple predicate is only the main verb.
Class is the simple subject. Did have is the simple predicate (verb).
Subject: Few people Predicate: had them
"are going" is the simple predicate.
A simple predicate consists of the verb.