The simple predicate is "come".
The subject is car, the predicate is stopped.
"wash the car with Dad."
The simple predicate refers to the verb in a sentence.Example:The blue car drove past quickly.Divided into subject and predicate, bolding the simple predicate:The blue car | drove past quickly.
The complete predicate in the sentence "Signals come from the brain during sleep" is "come from the brain during sleep." This part of the sentence tells us what the subject (signals) does, providing information about their origin and the context in which they occur.
A compound subject consists of two or more subjects joined by a conjunction, while a simple predicate is the main verb or verb phrase in the sentence. For example, "Tom and Jerry play soccer every Saturday" has a compound subject ("Tom and Jerry") and a simple predicate ("play"). Another example is "The cat and the dog sleep on the couch," where "The cat and the dog" is the compound subject and "sleep" is the simple predicate.
Daring
predicate = crashed his car (= what comes after the subject) verb (crashed) is transitive (it takes an object) this is not the right answers
Yes you can sleep on the roof or the bonnet
A predicate describes or provides information about the subject in a sentance. The bold part is the predicate. "Harry parked the car." A simple sentence might read: "Harry was scared to park the car because he was a new driver." With a split predicate, the sentence would read: Harry, because he was a new driver, was scared to park the car. The predicate modifies the subject of a sentence. Writers will often break up a sentence with split predicates to alleviate monotony. If used too often however, it could have the the opposite effect. Too many split predicates make for difficult reading. It's best to use them sparingly.
a predicate objective is a predicate that has an objective
Can is a modal verb. It is not a predicate or part of predicate until it is used in a sentence.I can see you - can see you = the predicate. can = simple predicate