The predicate in "The wind gently blew her hair back from her face" is, "Blew her hair back from her face"
The current state of the economy is disturbing. His hat fell into the river and was quickly carried away by the strong current.
The word 'applause' is a noun, a word for approval shown by clapping hands; a word for any positive expression of appreciation or approval; a word for a thing.A noun can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, as the object of a verb or a preposition, as a predicate noun (subject complement), and as an object complement.Examples:The applause from the stadium was heard blocks away. (subject of the sentence)He was silenced by the roar that the applause generated. (subject of the relative clause)We heard applause coming from the board room. (direct object of the verb 'heard')The audience responded with applause. (object of the preposition 'with')The sound you hear is the applause of the fans. (predicate noun, sound = applause)The sound you hear is clapping, applause. (object complement, clapping = applause)
away
In the sentence "Get away from the water during a storm," the simple subject is the understood 'you.' That is the the complete thought is You should get away from the water . . .
there are a lot of themThere are four(4) types of sentences. The declarative sentence makes a statement. The interrogative sentence asks a question. The exclamatory sentence is a statement that shows strong emotion. And the imperative sentence gives a direction or a command.
The predicate in this sentence is "blew my scarf away," which describes the action that the subject, the strong wind, is performing.
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence because there is no linking verb. The adjectives are "powerful" and "far away".
A sentence is made up of a subject and a predicate. A predicate is a verb and 'everything else'. I'm not sure what you mean by a simple predicate but a predicate could just be a verb e.g. I ran or I ran away or it could be a sentence with a verb and an object e.g. I saw him or I left the house.
The secretary answered the phone
The simple predicate is always the verb and not the verb phrase. Don't forget about linking verbs! E.i. She was walking to the park. Was walking is the simple predicate in that sentence. C'mon I am in 8th grade and I know that right away.
The scarf was very worn out, so I had to throw it out. OR The scarf was very worn, so I threw it away. ***you don't have to say worn out, you can just say worn, but either works.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing; for example:teacher, country, phoneA predicate is the part of a sentence that is the verb and all of the words that follow that are related to that verb. A sentence may have two or more verbs with related words.The simple predicate is the verb itself.Examples:Jack rode his bike to school.The predicate is 'rode his bike to school'.The simple predicate is rode.The nouns in the sentence are: Jack, bike, school.We are meeting Jill at the mall.The predicate is 'are meeting Jill at the mall'.The simple predicate is are meeting.The nouns in the sentence are: Jill, mallThe word 'we' is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of the nouns for the person speaking and one or more other person.Mom folded the clothes and put them away.There are two predicates: 'folded the clothes', 'put them away'.There are two simple predicates: folded, put.The nouns in the sentence are: Mom, clothes.The word 'them' is a pronoun, a word that takes the place of the noun 'clothes'.
"is" is a verb; it's a being-verb to be precise. These are the list of being-verbs: is, am, were, was, are, be, being, and been Being-verbs express a state of existence or being.
A sentence will have both a subject and a predicate (or one that is understood, for imperatives, e.g. "Stop!" = You must stop! / You should stop!) A sentence fragment will be missing either a subject or a predicate, or may be a dependent clause without an independent clause. Sentence: John has a dog that likes to play. Fragment: Has a dog that likes to play (no subject) Fragment: A dog that likes to play (no predicate for dog) Fragment: That likes to play (no independent clause) Sometimes fragments are acceptable in literary forms, e.g. where used for effect. "The killer had struck again! In broad daylight. And gotten away." (the phrase and clause are fragments that should have been part of the sentence)
The wind was too strong, so I had to wind up my kite to keep it from blowing away.
The current state of the economy is disturbing. His hat fell into the river and was quickly carried away by the strong current.
Sometimes, I have the urge to run away and change my name.