young man , found
"Mines" is the simple subject and "are found" is the simple predicate in a passive voice.
Natural sentence: the subject is found in the beginning and the predicate last. Transposed sentence: the predicate is found in the beginning and the subject last.
Yes and no.They refer to the same noun, but are not the same word. A predicate nominative is a noun that is found in the predicate (the verb half of the sentence) that renames the subject. Example: "Allison is president of the senior class." 'Allison' is the subject;' is 'is the verb. 'President' is a noun found in the predicate which is re-naming Allison. President is the predicate nominative.
The complete subject is "A natural resource" and the complete predicate is "is a material found in nature that is useful or necessary to living things". The simple subject is "resource" and the simple predicate is "is".
Yes, "found" can be a simple predicate in a sentence. It is the main verb that expresses the action of locating something or someone.
Okay, a compound subject is two subjects into one, and a simple predicate is the same ending to both subjects. For example: Alan and Robin were found walking down the street. In the foregoing, Alan and Robin are the two subjects, also known as compound subject, while simple predicate was "were found." However, I added another predicate which was basically an adjective phrase, "walking down the street." But "were found" is a simple predicate.
The KEY word in the predicate part of the sentence. It is not the WHOLE predicate. The simple predicate in a sentence is also known as the verb or verbs. The SIMPLE Predicate is not all the other words that are found in the predicate
The complete predicate for that sentence is: "were finally found".
found two flint stones child
A predicate noun is just a renaming of the subject, always found after a linking verb (a linking verb can be replaced by the word is, are, or were and still let the sentence make sense). Therefore, it is relatively simple to do. You can write, "Sue is a lawyer" and lawyer will be the predicate noun, since it is renaming Sue.
A predicate adjective follows a linking verb. The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject, or the subject becomes the object. Some common linking verbs are seem, feel, and any form of be.Examples:I am sick.Bob feels sick.You seem sick.Barb got sick.In all the examples, sick is the predicate adjective.
found