The subject.
the predicat
A verb in a sentence shows action or tells information about the action. It indicates what the subject is doing or what is happening in the sentence. Without a verb, a sentence would not express any action or convey information about it.
It can be the subject, or it can be the object. In a typical sentence, the subject is who or what performed the action. The object is who or what received the action. For example: The boy hugged his sister. Boy is the subject (he did the action), and sister is the object (she received it).
In the sentence "Shawn tells long crazy jokes" the verb "tells" is an action verb.
In a sentence, the word "action" can function as a noun.
In the sentence "Shawn tells long crazy jokes" the verb "tells" is an action verb.
It is part of a sentence which tells us what the subject is.
The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells what the subject is or does. It typically includes the verb and any additional information about the subject's action or state.
In this sentence, "Chris" is the indirect object. The subject (the person who did the action) is James. The verb tells us what James did (he gave), the direct object tells us what he gave (twenty dollars), and the indirect object tells us to whom he gave it. A sentence cannot have an indirect object unless it has a direct object.
The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells you more about the subject. The subject is the person or thing doing the action, in this case 'Learning new things'. Thus 'is exciting' is the predicate.
The predicate part of the sentence tells what the subject does or has. It can also describe what the subject is or is like.
Using a word that tells you someone is doing an acton