The complete predicate is "fell all over the city"; the simple predicate is "fell".
lasted
A sentence should have a subject and a predicate : the subject relates, performs, or perceives the action (or status) indicated by the predicate. Normally the subject is a noun, pronoun, or gerund. Normally the predicate contains a verb. The sentence may also have an object which receives the action by the subject. In written or spoken imperatives, the subject is usually understood to be a person, and the predicate may be an assumed form of the verb "be". Examples : * The man / fell. (subject/predicate) * The dog/ is sick. (subject/ predicate adjective as modifier) * He/ is a boy. (pronoun subject/predicate with nominal or identity) * The man / hit the dog. (subject/ predicate with object) * Running/ gives / me / a headache. (gerund subject/predicate with indirect and direct objects) Imperative (in exclamations) : * "Go to work." (you is the subject, "go to work" is the imperative predicate) * "Run!" (you is the subject, run is the imperative predicate) * "Fools!" ("you" or "they" is the subject, "are" the verb predicate, "fools" the predicate adjective or attribute )
Asleep is a predicate nominative.
After noisily scoffing down the swill, the pig gave a deep sigh and fell fast asleep.
He fell off the ladder and broke his arm.We will fell this tree.
A clause is a group of words containing a subject and a predicate that is an incomplete thought that can't stand on its own. For example:What John saw...The tree that fell in the storm......to whom the notice was sent....which she said to me.All of these have a subject and a verb, which is what is required to be a sentence, but are incomplete. They are clauses.
predicate is the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject. So the predicate for Elvin fell almost twice is "fell twice"
BABE FELL into the frozen river. INTO THE FROZEN RIVER IS THE PREDICATE.
frequently fell rapidly.
A basic sentence has a subject and a predicate. The subject can be implied but is always a noun. A predicate is what that noun does, in layman's terms.it needs a subject and a predicatebut you spelled it wrongits sentencesubject is who or what is doing itand the predicate is what it is doingI fell on the floor.I is the subject and fell is the predicateit needs a subject and a predicatebut you spelled it wrongits sentencesubject is who or what is doing itand the predicate is what it is doingI fell on the floor.I is the subject and fell is the predicate
It's not missing the predicate, but it's missing the subject. "He broke his leg when he fell off his bike."
"He fell into a deep torpor."
very dark is the adjective here
After a long day of hiking, I fell into a peaceful slumber under the stars.
The fact that it is "a phrase" suggests that it is not a sentence. It is a fragment (a noun, subject) without a verb as a predicate, e.g. "Eight inches of snow fell."
A sentence should have a subject and a predicate : the subject relates, performs, or perceives the action (or status) indicated by the predicate. Normally the subject is a noun, pronoun, or gerund. Normally the predicate contains a verb. The sentence may also have an object which receives the action by the subject. In written or spoken imperatives, the subject is usually understood to be a person, and the predicate may be an assumed form of the verb "be". Examples : * The man / fell. (subject/predicate) * The dog/ is sick. (subject/ predicate adjective as modifier) * He/ is a boy. (pronoun subject/predicate with nominal or identity) * The man / hit the dog. (subject/ predicate with object) * Running/ gives / me / a headache. (gerund subject/predicate with indirect and direct objects) Imperative (in exclamations) : * "Go to work." (you is the subject, "go to work" is the imperative predicate) * "Run!" (you is the subject, run is the imperative predicate) * "Fools!" ("you" or "they" is the subject, "are" the verb predicate, "fools" the predicate adjective or attribute )
Asleep is a predicate nominative.
After noisily scoffing down the swill, the pig gave a deep sigh and fell fast asleep.