"I felt much better" has a subject complement.
No. The verb "feel" may be a linking word in some cases, but it is not one in this sentence. True linking verbs are forms of the following verbs: be, seem, and become. Other verbs, like feel, may be linking verbs if they are functionally equivalent to the verb to be. Example: "John feels embarrassed" is the same as "John is embarrassed" and in this case "embarrassed" would be the subject complement. In the above question, however, "The nurse felt your pulse" is not functionally equivalent to "The nurse is your pulse" or "The nurse seems your pulse" and so there is no subject complement in this sentence.
In that sentence, felt is a linking verb. It connects the subject, Rosemary, to the predicate adjective, sick.
The verb for strong is strengthen.Explanation:If you change strong into a noun (strength) you can then change it into a verb. (strengthen)
A predicate adjective and a predicated nominative are the nouns or adjectives that follow a linking verb and describe or restate the subject noun.Both are called the subject complement.In the example, "The pit crew felt hot and grimy." the predicate adjectives are:hot and grimy (describing the subject noun 'pit crew')
"I felt much better" has a subject complement.
No. The verb "feel" may be a linking word in some cases, but it is not one in this sentence. True linking verbs are forms of the following verbs: be, seem, and become. Other verbs, like feel, may be linking verbs if they are functionally equivalent to the verb to be. Example: "John feels embarrassed" is the same as "John is embarrassed" and in this case "embarrassed" would be the subject complement. In the above question, however, "The nurse felt your pulse" is not functionally equivalent to "The nurse is your pulse" or "The nurse seems your pulse" and so there is no subject complement in this sentence.
B: I felt much better.
The popliteal pulse is felt behind the knee.
the brachial pulse
felt
the wrist joint where the radial pulse may be felt and the neck just above the sternomastoid muscle where the carotid pulse may be felt
The facial pulse may be referring to the temporal pulse, which is felt over the temples.
A pulse deficit is the difference between an actual heart beat and the pulse felt in the wrist or neck. Normal pulse deficits can be felt in someone with a pacemaker.
A pulse can be felt where an artery crosses a bone. The main areas where the strongest pulse may be felt are the carotid artery in the neck, the brachial artery in the crook of the arm and the radial artery in the inner wrist.
Is it possible to tell if things are not working correctly in your body by feeling the pulse in your wrist?
Pulse.