A subject complement (either a predicate nominative or predicate adjective) follows a linking verb.
Examples:
Kathy is sick. ("sick" is the predicate adjective)
Ryan is a teacher. ("teacher" is the predicate nominative)
A subject complement typically follows a linking verb. This can be a noun, pronoun, or adjective that renames or describes the subject of the sentence. Examples of linking verbs include "be," "become," "seem," "appear," and "feel."
Linking verbs connect the subject of a verb to additional information regarding the subject. The most common linking verbs are various forms of to be, to become and to seem. Following a linking verb will come before a noun or a verb.
For example:
Before a noun-
George is the captain of the team.
Is= linking verb and after it comes a noun=captain.
Before a verb-
Jessica seemed very excited.
Seemed=linking verb and after it comes a verb=excited.
** The second example is an example of a linking verb before an adjective (excited) rather than a verb. This is like saying "Jessica appeared very excited".
Yes, a predicate nominative can follow a linking verb, where it renames or refers to the subject. However, it does not typically follow an action verb, which instead connects the subject to a direct object.
Yes, adverbs modifying a verb can apply to a linking verb or an action verb. Examples:linking verb: He is always the first one in.actin verb: He runs every Monday after school.
Yes, a noun can follow both linking and action verbs in a sentence. In the case of a linking verb, the noun functions as a subject complement that renames or describes the subject. With an action verb, the noun typically functions as the direct object receiving the action of the verb.
Verb phrases can follow both linking and action verbs. Linking verbs are followed by a subject complement, which can include verb phrases to describe the subject. Action verbs are followed by the direct object, which can also include verb phrases to further explain the action.
No, adverbs do not follow linking verbs. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, such as an adjective or a noun. Adverbs typically modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs, but they do not function as subject complements following a linking verb.
A subject follows a linking or action verb. A predicate noun or predicate adjective can follow a linking verb. An indirect object is the noun that can follow an action verb.
Yes, a predicate nominative can follow a linking verb, where it renames or refers to the subject. However, it does not typically follow an action verb, which instead connects the subject to a direct object.
Yes, a subject complement follows a linking verb and not an action verb.
Yes, a noun can follow both linking and action verbs in a sentence. In the case of a linking verb, the noun functions as a subject complement that renames or describes the subject. With an action verb, the noun typically functions as the direct object receiving the action of the verb.
Yes, adverbs modifying a verb can apply to a linking verb or an action verb. Examples:linking verb: He is always the first one in.actin verb: He runs every Monday after school.
No, the verb to tail is not a linking verb. The verb to tail means to follow someone secretly to see what they are going to do.The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign:the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister) orthe subject becomes the object (Mary's feet got wet. feet->wet).A person can't secretly follow them self.
Verb phrases can follow both linking and action verbs. Linking verbs are followed by a subject complement, which can include verb phrases to describe the subject. Action verbs are followed by the direct object, which can also include verb phrases to further explain the action.
The word chases is a form of the verb "chase", an action verb meaning either to follow or to pursue.
No. The verb to become is a linking verb, and the verb to be is a linking verb, but they are two separate verbs.
Predicate adjectives.
both, depending on the context
No, "followed" is not a linking verb. It is a past tense verb showing action, typically describing someone or something moving or accompanying another. Linking verbs serve to connect the subject with a noun or adjective that describes or renames it.