A predicate noun or nominative is a noun (or pronoun) that occurs after a linking verb and means the same as the subject.
Marilyn was her best friend in college. (friend: predicate noun)
Proof: Her best friend was Marilyn.
Mr. Harrison is Charlie's tennis coach. (coach: predicate noun)
No, a predicate does not always contain a noun or a pronoun.A predicate is the part of the sentences that is not the subject or its modifiers. A predicate is the verb and the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. A predicate may be just a verb.Examples sentences containing a predicate with no nouns or pronouns:Mary is driving. (the predicate is a verb only)She will come soon. (soon is an adverbmodifying the verb will come)Today is hot. (hot is an adjective, a predicate adjective).
The statement "He or she could tell you" has a compound subject - there are two nouns preceding the verb. A compound predicate would be "He could tell you about airplanes or about trains."
A predicate adjective and a predicated nominative are the nouns or adjectives that follow a linking verb and describe or restate the subject noun.Both are called the subject complement.In the example, "The pit crew felt hot and grimy." the predicate adjectives are:hot and grimy (describing the subject noun 'pit crew')
A sentence is a complete thought, containing a subject and a predicate (the verb and its modifiers). Sentences contain nouns, verbs, and modifiers and may consist of several clauses, or phrases.
Example predicate nouns for 'The dancers seemed...':The dancers seemed a vision in pink.The dancers seemed forest animals darting between the trees.The dancers seemed perfect ladies and gentlemen.The dancers seemed well trained athletes.
nouns
Yes, for example: John (noun) is happy (predicate adjective).
use nouns or pronouns in a subject and verb for predicate
A linking verb wouldn't be a predicate adjective or predicate noun (predicate nominative). Verbs, adjectives, and nouns are different parts of speech.A linking verb connects the subject to a predicate adjective or a predicate nominative (subject complements). An easy was to identify a linking verb is that it acts as an equals sign.I am happy. (I=happy) Happy is the predicate adjective.Bob is a teacher. (Bob=teacher) Teacher is the predicate nominative. It's a noun, not an adjective.Adjectives are words that describe nouns. Nouns identify people, places, or things. Predicate adjectives and predicate nominatives are still adjectives and nouns, but they follow a linking verb.
Nouns typically appear as subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, noun appositives, predicate nouns, or as objects of prepositions.
The predicate noun (or predicate nominative) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject:Mary is my sister. (Mary=sister)Or the subject becomes the object: Mary became a lawyer. (Mary->lawyer).The nouns sister and lawyerare the predicate nouns.
A noun can not be part of a simple predicate, because a simple predicate only includes the verb phrase. The complete predicate, however, may contain nouns, because it includes the verb phrase and any of its objects (Direct and Indirect - which can be nouns and pronouns) and modifiers (which may include adverbial and adjective phrases -- prepositional phrases which have noun or pronoun objects).
True. Indefinite pronouns can function as subjects, predicate nouns, direct objects, indirect objects, objects of a preposition, and appositives, serving to replace specific or unspecific nouns in a sentence.
Yes, "good" can function as a predicate adjective rather than a predicate noun. Predicate nouns typically rename the subject and follow linking verbs, while predicate adjectives describe the subject. For example, in the sentence "The soup is good," "good" describes the quality of the soup, thus serving as a predicate adjective.
A predicate noun is a single noun or a noun phrase that renames the subject of a sentence and follows a form of the verb "to be" or another linking verb or another linking verb. Verbs "to be" include is, was, am, are, be, being, been, has been, may be, and were; in addition to verbs "to be" some linking verbs are smell, taste, feel, sound, grow, seem, remain, become, continue, appear, turn, and stay. Example sentences:My mother is a professional bowler.John may be the next class president.The Johnsons were the first on our street to install a pool.She plans to become a dancer.These sheets smell like lavender.
No, a predicate does not always contain a noun or a pronoun.A predicate is the part of the sentences that is not the subject or its modifiers. A predicate is the verb and the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. A predicate may be just a verb.Examples sentences containing a predicate with no nouns or pronouns:Mary is driving. (the predicate is a verb only)She will come soon. (soon is an adverbmodifying the verb will come)Today is hot. (hot is an adjective, a predicate adjective).
Yes, a predicate is the verb and all of the words related to that verb that follow the verb; there can be more than one predicate in a sentence. The words related the verb included in the predicate can be a noun or nouns. Examples:This restaurant was recommended by my sister. ('was recommended by my sister' is the complete predicate, 'sister' is a noun)The Browns live on this street. ('live on this street is the complete predicate, 'street' is a noun)