This is the predicate. A simple two-word example: "It rained."
"It" is the subject, "rained" is a verb, and it is the predicate.
"It is cold outside." "It" is the subject, while "is " is the predicate: the rest of the words are modifiers.
About the subject
The main thing being talked about in the sentence. It is always a noun or pronoun. It always does the action in the sentence, otherwise known as the verb. The subject can be common or proper, singular or plural.
Example sentences:
"The young man ran the long marathon." Man is the simple subject in that sentence.
"The phone's keyboard was acting up." Keyboard is the simple subject in that sentence.
"The papers blew across the room." Papers is the simple subject in that sentence.
*Note: Simple subject is a term referring strictly to the subject. The complete subject is everything before the predicate/verb.
The predicate is the part of a sentence that states what the subject does, has, or is.
For example. In the sentence "He kicked the ball," the phrase "kicked the ball" says what he does.
In the sentence "She owns a pony," "owns a pony" says what she has.
In "That ball is red," the predicate "is red" says what the subject "ball" is.
Assuming that the questioner meant "does" instead of "dose", this is the definition of a an active verb.
You can usually think of the subject as the DOER of the main action of the sentence. "Mary ate the apple". Mary is the subject; she is the one who DID the eating. It gets much more complex than this, but this is the basic idea.
Simple predicate.
The verb states what the subject does in a sentence.
The subject of the sentence tells you who it is about.Jenny is nice.Jenny is the subject of this sentence."What" a sentence is about, however, includes a verb (predicate). Generally you need a subject and predicate to make sense of a sentence.For example:I walk home. (subject I, predicate walk,complete predicate walk home)
An active verb is required; any other part of speech may be present.
Yes, James Santos example was (Emman run.). Emman = subject/Run = predicate its a complete sentence or an independent clause. A clause is a group of related words containing a subject that tells readers what the sentence is about, and a verb that tells readers what the subject is doing. An independent clause, also called a main clause, is a clause that can stand on its own. It contains all the information necessary to be a complete sentence. An independent clause has a subject that tells you what the sentence is about and a verb that tells you what the subject is doing. It expresses a complete thought, relaying that something has happened or was said.
Easily is an adverb. It tells how the Cowboys defeated the Lions.
The is called the 'definite article' and it tells us we are talking about something that both the speaker and the hearer know about.
The verb tells what the subject is doing in a sentence.
The subject tells who or what the sentence is about.
The subject is who or what the sentence is about.
The subject of the sentence tells you who it is about.Jenny is nice.Jenny is the subject of this sentence."What" a sentence is about, however, includes a verb (predicate). Generally you need a subject and predicate to make sense of a sentence.For example:I walk home. (subject I, predicate walk,complete predicate walk home)
An active verb is required; any other part of speech may be present.
the subject is what the sentence is about
That type of sentence is called a declarative sentence. It states a fact or provides information about a subject.
The subject tells who or what a sentence is about.
A declarative sentence tells about the subject by making a statement or providing information. It usually ends with a period.
The predicate is the part of the sentence that tells what the subject is or does. It typically includes the verb and any additional information about the subject's action or state.
The subject.
The verb