no, it is a Predicate Noun.
Grateful can be a predicate adjective. Example: I am grateful. A predicate adjective follows a linking verb and describes the subject. "Am" is the linking verb, "grateful" is the predicate adjective, and "I" is the subject.
a predictive adjective
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence.
Helpless is the predicate adjective.
Any adjective can be used as a predicate adjective, an adjective that follows a linking verb. Examples: The noisy boy will arrive soon. (adjective) The boy is noisy. (predicate adjective)
Yes because it can describe a noun--a popular person.
Mountain is a predicate noun.
A predicate adjective is an adjective that follows a linking verb and describes the subject of the sentence. For example, in the sentence "The flowers are beautiful," "beautiful" is the predicate adjective. A predicate nominative, on the other hand, is a noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb and renames the subject. In the sentence "She is a teacher," "teacher" is the predicate nominative.
The word "cute" in the following sentence: He is cute. A predicate adjective is just an adjective in the predicate of a sentence, or following a verb.
The test was long.A predicate adjective modifies or describes the subject.The movie was fun and interesting.Fun and interesting describe the movie making them the predicate adjective.
The verb that joins a subject to a predicate noun or a predicate adjective is called a linking verb.A linking verb is a verb that acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object.A predicate noun or a predicate adjective is a subject complement.Example subject complements:Mary is my sister. (Mary = sister, predicate noun)Mary's feet got wet. (feet = wet, predicate adjective)
A predicate noun and a predicate adjective are both called a subject complement.The predicate noun (also called a predicate nominative) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.The predicate adjective (also called a subject complement) is the adjective following a linking verb which modifies (describes) the subject of the sentence.Examples:Mary is my sister. (the predicate noun 'sister' restates the subject 'Mary')Mary's feet got wet. (the predicate adjective 'wet' describes the subject 'feet')