The sentence fragment, "CANNOT SAVE ALL OF THEM" is a predicate.
A predicate is the verb and all of the words related to that verb.
A simple predicate is the verb itself (save).
A complete predicate is all of the words related to the verb (cannot save all of them).
A sentence can have more than one predicate, for example:
We cannot save all of them but if we move quickly, we can save some.
To be grammatically correct, it cannot stand alone as the complete predicate in a sentence. It is a linking verb and therefore needs to link the subject to something else in the predicate. However, many people talk with incorrect grammar (I'm guilty as charged.) and will leave are as the complete predicate.
The predicate is the subject of the subjunctive. If there is no clause the the predicate cannot be closed. If the difference of the products if greater than 14, then the subject is the predicate. Hitherto, if the sum of the difference is less than 1, then the product is productive. If not, then the subject is a photo.
supply a noun to function as the subject. or supply a verb to function as the predicate.
A complete subject and predicate are more thorough than simple subjects and predicates. A complete subject includes the entire group of words discussing the subject, while the complete predicate consists of the words left in a sentence after the complete subject is removed.
A subordinate clause contains a subject and a predicate but cannot stand on its own. A subordinate clause can also be referred to as a dependent clause.
rewrite it to make it a complete sentence answer to the apex question :)
"His" cannot be a predicate because it's not a verb.
Yes, a noun clause is used as a subject of a sentence or the object of a verb or a preposition. For example:What you want is what you want, despite what others need.Subject: What you wantVerb: isDirect object: what you wantPreposition: despiteObject of the preposition: what others need
I say yes, but I can't explain why. Just look at it: Listen. It is a complete thought. There is an implied audience, and definitely a fully expressed idea, but I cannot call this a technical answer... just my thoughts. Yes, it is a complete sentence. It is the predicate (verb); the subject is understood. It is a command/statement. It is the sams as "Stop." or "Wait."
An adverb cannot join clauses as conjunctions do. It cannot be a subject or object as nouns are. It cannot form the predicate without a verb. Notably, an adverb can modify a verb,adjective, or adverb, but not a noun or pronoun.
Yes, James Santos example was (Emman run.). Emman = subject/Run = predicate its a complete sentence or an independent clause. A clause is a group of related words containing a subject that tells readers what the sentence is about, and a verb that tells readers what the subject is doing. An independent clause, also called a main clause, is a clause that can stand on its own. It contains all the information necessary to be a complete sentence. An independent clause has a subject that tells you what the sentence is about and a verb that tells you what the subject is doing. It expresses a complete thought, relaying that something has happened or was said.
Popular is an adjective, so cannot function as a predicate nominative. However, it can form a predicative adjective, as in the following: Avril Lavigne is popular.