"for bed"
shine
Yes, "It rained all night." is a complete sentence.
The verb here (the predicate) has two parts-- did and snore. (When asking a question in the past tense, the helping verb "did" is used, along with the main verb). So, Max is the subject, and the verb will show what action he performed; in this sentence, "did snore" is the predicate.
This sentence is an imperative sentence so the subject is implied and the rest of the sentence is the predicate.
it's not morey because the person is not a predicate it's D.met because a predicate is a verb and the verb in this sentence is met
Complete subject: Everyone in the church Complete predicate: . . . rushed out into the freezing night air.
last night
shine
"A sudden flash of light in the night sky." That isn't a sentence at all, since it has no predicate (verb).
Yes, "It rained all night." is a complete sentence.
The verb here (the predicate) has two parts-- did and snore. (When asking a question in the past tense, the helping verb "did" is used, along with the main verb). So, Max is the subject, and the verb will show what action he performed; in this sentence, "did snore" is the predicate.
This sentence is an imperative sentence so the subject is implied and the rest of the sentence is the predicate.
it's not morey because the person is not a predicate it's D.met because a predicate is a verb and the verb in this sentence is met
The phrase 'soothing as night winds are' is not a sentence; it has no subject; it is not a complete thought.
There is no predicate adjective in "the man who road on the train all night".
The nouns in the sentence, "Orion is a constellation in the night sky." are:Orion; proper noun, subject of the sentenceconstellation; common noun, predicate nominative, direct objectsky; common noun, object of the preposition 'in'
has been driving