Subject: (After a slow beginning) the farmerharvested the whole crop (in one week).
So the rest is going to be the predicate or the predicate is:
harvested the whole crop in one week
whole crop harvested in one week
The farmer harvested the whole crop in one week
The farmer harvested
"Rice is grown in the field by the farmer."
The singular possessive noun in the sentence is:farmer's (the 's indicates that the wheat belongs to the farmer; one farmer)
Sentence: The farmer scattered corn for the chickens.
The farmer placed the yoke on the oxen and began to plow the field.
The cows lowed with contentment as the farmer unloaded the fresh hay. Contentment is the key to happiness.
whole crop harvested in one week
The farmer harvested 20 bushels of barley.
Neither. It is a conjunction, because it connects the clause "the farmer harvested the corn" to the actual sentence, which is "he sold it as ensilage."
"MrJones", presumably a proper noun for the spelling of which the questioner is responsible, is the simple subject, and the simple predicate is "is".
do they go straight to the store
Today the majority of farmers, at least those in North America, sell their wheat once it's harvested.
the negro belonged to the white farmer! :)
The former farmer died.
you have to go to the farmer at the beginning of that sector (the farmer has a shovel) and ask him for manure
"Rice is grown in the field by the farmer."
tentant farmer is one who resides on and farms land owned by its or there landlord.
Her friend, Jack was a lonely farmer.