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It appears to be a subject complement.
The linking verb in the sentence is "is." It connects the subject "Phoenix" to the subject complement "the capital of Arizona."
Ronald P. Fogelman has written: 'Description and chemical analyses for selected wells in the central Sacramento Valley, California' -- subject(s): Water, Wells, Analysis 'Ground-water quality in the Sacramento Valley, California' -- subject(s): Maps, Water quality, Groundwater, Nitrates, Boron 'Descriptions and chemical analyses for selected wells in the Central Sacramento Valley, California' -- subject(s): Groundwater, Water quality
R. G. Simpson has written: 'Flood hydrology of Butte Basin 1973 and 1974 water years Sacramento Valley, California' -- subject(s): Floods 'Determination of channel capacity of the Sacramento River between Ordbend and Glenn, Butte and Glenn Counties, California' -- subject(s): Rivers, Sacramento River (Calif.)
A subject complement gerund is a gerund phrase that follows a linking verb and renames the subject of the sentence. It functions as a complement to the subject, providing additional information or clarification about the subject.
A subject complement follows a linking verb and renames or describes the subject. A subject complement can be a noun or an adjective.Sarah Silverman is a comedian.Here, comedian renames Sarah Silverman, so comedian is the subject complement.
Yes, a sentence with a linking verb will often have a subject complement. The subject complement renames or describes the subject and is connected to it by the linking verb.
A subject complement follows a linking verb and renames or describes the subject. A subject complement can be a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective.Example: Sarah Silverman is a comedian.Here, comedian renames Sarah Silverman, so comedian is the subject complement (Sarah Silverman = comedian).Example: Sarah Silverman is hilarious.Here, hilarious describes Sarah Silverman, so hilarious is the subject complement (Sarah Silverman = hilarious).
Subject-Verb-Complement-Adverb: "She painted the room beautifully." Subject-Verb-Adverb-Complement: "He danced gracefully at the party." Subject-Verb-Complement-Complement: "They elected her president unanimously." Subject-Verb-Adverb-Complement: "The team played exceptionally well in the tournament."
The subject complement in the sentence is "to a farmer," which completes the meaning of the subject "they gave their dog" by indicating where the dog was given.
There is no subject complement in that sentence. A subject complement is a noun, pronoun, or adjective that follows a linking verb. Left is the verb, and it's transitive, not linking.
There are two types of complements:a subject complement, a noun or a pronoun that follows a linking verb, renaming or restating the subject of the sentence.an object complement, a noun that follows and modifies or refers to a direct object.Examples:Jack was a spelling bee champion. (subject complement, Jack = champion)The flowers are for my sister, Jill. (object complement, sister = Jill)The person he asked for was you. (subject complement, person = you)A subject complement can also be an adjective, also called predicate adjective.Example: Jack was so happy. (Jack = happy)