The predicate is everything that is not the subject. The simple predicate is a verb or verb phrase. eg
The man next door is a doctor
complete subject = The man next door, complete predicate = is a doctor.
simple subject = man, simple predicate = is
The woman is waiting for her husband.
complete subject = The woman, complete predicate = is waiting for her husband.
simple subject = woman, simple predicate = is waiting
The simple predicate is "buy." The simple subject is the understood (but unspoken) "you" - "[You] buy that video."
The subject is you understood. The verb is remove.
The predicate is everything that is not the subject. The simple predicate is a verb or verb phrase. eg The man next door is a doctor complete subject = The man next door, complete predicate = is a doctor. simple subject = man, simple predicate = is The woman is waiting for her husband. complete subject = The woman, complete predicate = is waiting for her husband. simple subject = woman, simple predicate = is waiting
A sentence must have a subject and a predicate, although the subject may be understood (you) in a predicate-only command (e.g. Stop! meaning you should or must stop).
The subject is "name" and the predicate is "is".
The cat (subject) slept peacefully (predicate). Sarah (subject) enjoys reading books (predicate). The sun (subject) shone brightly (predicate). The children (subject) played in the park (predicate). The teacher (subject) explained the lesson (predicate).
you is subject thank is predicate
it is a predicate
A sentence should have a subject and a predicate : the subject relates, performs, or perceives the action (or status) indicated by the predicate. Normally the subject is a noun, pronoun, or gerund. Normally the predicate contains a verb. The sentence may also have an object which receives the action by the subject. In written or spoken imperatives, the subject is usually understood to be a person, and the predicate may be an assumed form of the verb "be". Examples : * The man / fell. (subject/predicate) * The dog/ is sick. (subject/ predicate adjective as modifier) * He/ is a boy. (pronoun subject/predicate with nominal or identity) * The man / hit the dog. (subject/ predicate with object) * Running/ gives / me / a headache. (gerund subject/predicate with indirect and direct objects) Imperative (in exclamations) : * "Go to work." (you is the subject, "go to work" is the imperative predicate) * "Run!" (you is the subject, run is the imperative predicate) * "Fools!" ("you" or "they" is the subject, "are" the verb predicate, "fools" the predicate adjective or attribute )
"Es alto" is a complete sentence in Spanish, meaning "He is tall." It consists of a subject (Es) and a predicate (alto) that provides information about the subject's height.
A subject and a predicate.
Subject predicate.