The word "hilly" is an adjective that describes a characteristic of the landscape, specifically indicating that the terrain consists of many hills or slopes. In this context, "hilly" is acting as an adjectival complement that provides additional information about the noun it modifies.
A complement in grammar is a word, phrase, or clause that is necessary to complete the meaning of a given expression. For example, in the sentence "She is very kind," "very kind" is the complement that describes "She." Complements are essential for providing additional information about the subject or object of a sentence.
In English, "das Kind" translates to "the child."
The English term for "matulungin" is helpful or kind.
"Was" is a past tense form of the verb "to be". It functions as a linking verb to connect a subject to a subject complement that describes or identifies it.
Both direct objects and subject complements are types of complements in a sentence. A direct object receives the action of the verb and answers the question "what" or "whom," while a subject complement renames or describes the subject after a linking verb. However, a direct object is necessary for the sentence to make sense, while a subject complement provides additional information about the subject.
Object Complement
Object complement.
Object complement.
predicate adjective :)
What kind of complement is symboy
objective complement
objective complement
direct object
hard to please, hard to handle, that sort of thing. To be honest, it's not a complement.
predicate adjective
That sentence contains a subject complement, where "became" links the subject "novel" with the predicate nominative "an overnight bestseller."
Very fertile hilly land