Adjectives, articles, and adjective phrases can modify a simple subject. These words and phrases provide more information about the subject's characteristics or qualities.
No, a complete predicate includes the verb and any words that modify or complete the verb, not the simple subject. The simple subject is the main noun in the sentence, while the complete predicate is the verb and everything related to it.
The simple subject is "You" and the simple predicate is "waited."
Yes, the simple subject is "wallet."
The simple subject is "class," and the simple predicate is "have."
The participle in the sentence is "riding," and it modifies the pronoun "you." It describes the action being performed by the subject of the sentence.
"skills" is the subject of this sentence. "Communication " modifies the subject.
No, a complete predicate includes the verb and any words that modify or complete the verb, not the simple subject. The simple subject is the main noun in the sentence, while the complete predicate is the verb and everything related to it.
An adverb
Simple Machine
False, it does not! An adjective modifies the subject of a sentence.
The subject is we. "Eighth graders" modifies we.
"We" is the subject. "Serve" is the predicate. "Only" modifies "serve." "Me" is the object. "In this room" modifies "me."
The Predicate position.
Americans = noun - subject few = adjective - it modifies the subject. speak = verb fluent = adjective - it modifies the object. French = noun - object
connecting adjectives
In the sentence: Romans held this festival on February 15:Romans - subjectheld - verbfestival - objectthis - modifies festivalon February 15 - clause
A simple subject is a thing. If it were talking about a Baseball or a sentence the baseball is the simple subject.