The complete subject is "The last essay question". The complete predicate is "was really challenging".
All sentences must have a predicate and a subject. Subjects and predicates are part of all sentences. Predicates can go before or after a subject of a sentence.
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
The subject of a sentence is the object, person, animal, or thing you are talking about in a sentence. (This is not to be confused with appositives, which is a further definition of a subject, usually separated by a comma on either side of it.) The predicate of a sentence is what is being said about the subject in the sentence, and it is always a verb (this includes is, am, are, has, have, had, was). Here is an example sentence: Betty danced onto the stage. In the preceding sentence, "Betty" is the subject, and "danced" is the predicate. Occasionally the order of subject-predicate can be flipped. Here is an example: On to the stage danced Betty. In a sentence there can also be multiple subjects and predicates. Here is an example: Billy and Joel and Mary and Alexis raced and chased each other at recess. In the preceding sentence the subjects are "Billy", "Joel", "Mary", and "Alexis". The predicates are "raced" and "chased".
It can be either - if it is used in the subject position it is a subject or if it is in the predicate position it is a predicate
a starfish can regrow a part of its body subject-starfish predicate-regrow
Okay, a compound subject is two subjects into one, and a simple predicate is the same ending to both subjects. For example: Alan and Robin were found walking down the street. In the foregoing, Alan and Robin are the two subjects, also known as compound subject, while simple predicate was "were found." However, I added another predicate which was basically an adjective phrase, "walking down the street." But "were found" is a simple predicate.
declarative sentence
A nominative case (subjective) pronoun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause and as a predicate nominative.
add a predicate to a word weaving baskets
The complete subject is "The last essay question". The complete predicate is "was really challenging".
Yes, of course: They normally would be. They could also be predicate nominatives.
Favorite is a noun in that sentence.
the simple subject is Baker's Sister and the simple predicate is named Doris to find simple subjects and predicates first find the subject and the rest after the subject is the predicate ............
1) Samantha and Mady collected seashells then cleaned them.Samantha and Mady are the subjects. The compound predicate that is collected and cleaned is telling you what they both did.2) The mayor and his brother were arrested and thrown into jail.The subjects are the mayor and his brother. The predicate says that they were both arrested, and that both were thrown into jail.
All sentences must have a predicate and a subject. Subjects and predicates are part of all sentences. Predicates can go before or after a subject of a sentence.