blast into the sky
A complete sentence must have a subject (noun) and a predicate (verb). For example, "The bird flies in the sky." "The bird" is the subject of the sentence (bird is a noun) and "flies in the sky" is the predicate (flies is the verb). This is a complete sentence. "The mailman" is NOT a complete sentence because there is no predicate (I didn't tell you what the mailman did). Ask yourself "Who?" and "Did what?" and if you're able to answer both questions then you probably have a subject and a predicate, and therefore, a complete sentence.
The rocket's ascent to the sky was magnificent.
a predicate objective is a predicate that has an objective
The predicate states what the subject does, is doing, or has done in a sentence.
In this sentence, the simple predicate is "piles." The complete predicate is "piles of letters."
We had a blast! The rocket is about to blast off.
The noun 'highways' is a predicate noun (or predicate nominative); a noun or pronoun following a linking verb that renames the subject.
When they blast off again.
To shoot the rocket up into the sky.
Shake the Wiimote until you launch into the air. You have to find the green icon to get the rocket.
on a rocket and blast of in 5,4,3,2,1 or five secends
The simple predicate of a sentence is simply the verb of the sentence. In this case, "made" is the verb, and therefore, also the simple predicate.
The rocket is launched upward into the sky during a rocket launch.
Yes. There's Rocket Blast Off and Rocket Re-Entry.
Were blasting off again!
you get the rocket powerup, then shake the wii remote
blast bomb incendury bomb v1 rocket v2 rocket