In this sentence, "is going to California next summer" is the complete predicate. The simple predicate, or verb, is "is going". Is is the helping verb, to is the preposition, California is the object of the preposition, summer is an adverb answering the question when, and next is an adjective modifying summer, answering which summer. Our is a possessive pronoun, it is also an adjective describing which family, and family is the simple subject.
The complete predicate of this sentence is 'fascinate people'.
Simple subject "he" Simple Predicate "loves" Complete subject "he" Complete predicate "loves to send e-mails"
The simple predicate is hiked, and the complete predicate is hiked up the mountain.
The complete predicate would be 'would like' because it is the complete verb clause.
Makes a camp
Is this a complete imperative (ordering) sentence? If so, "protect yourself and your family members" is correct. If it is only a predicate (someone else is doing the protecting) then it's fine, but not complete.
The predicate noun is pet.A predicate is the verb and all of the words that follow that are related to that verb (in other words, all the words that are not the subject or subject phrase). A sentence may have more than one verb or predicate.In the example sentence the predicate is 'is your family pet'.
'Enjoys' would be it.
might be
Simple subject: family Simple predicate: went
"Complete" predicates have lots of details (adverbs, phrases) about the verb. Simple predicates have simply the verbExample: The dog ran down the street. Simple predicate: ranExample: The dog ran down the street. Complete predicate: ran down the street
No, it's a fragment. To make it a complete sentence you need to add what the challenges of supporting a large family are.