Relaxing
not as easy as it looks
Relaxing
Disdainfully is the predicate adjective. The adjective describes how Jerry looks at the pile of laundry and who can blame him.
Easy
The sentence "Jerry looks into the map" does not contain a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is a word describing the subject that comes after a linking verb. An example is "Jerry looks confused," where confused is the predicate adjective.
No it is not. Relaxed can be both an adjective and a verb.Adjective: easy-going temperament.Verb: past tense of the verb "relax".
1. On (preposition)2. day (noun)3. nothing (pronoun)4. looks (linking verb predicate)Adjectives:1. A (article)2. breezy3. lifeless (Predicate Adjective)
looks for butterfiles
A predicate adjective is a term for an adjective that comes after a linking verb rather than before a noun. Out of these choices, the sentence, "Jerry looks ill today," uses a predicate adjective.
Disdainfully is the predicate adjective. The adjective describes how Jerry looks at the pile of laundry and who can blame him.
Easy
The sentence "Jerry looks into the map" does not contain a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is a word describing the subject that comes after a linking verb. An example is "Jerry looks confused," where confused is the predicate adjective.
ill
was
No it is not. Relaxed can be both an adjective and a verb.Adjective: easy-going temperament.Verb: past tense of the verb "relax".
1. On (preposition)2. day (noun)3. nothing (pronoun)4. looks (linking verb predicate)Adjectives:1. A (article)2. breezy3. lifeless (Predicate Adjective)
D. Jerry looks distainfully at the pile of laundry.Distainfully describes the predicate.B. jerry looks ill today
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.
Which of the following sentences contains a word that's used as a predicate adjective? a- Jerry looks at the map. b-Jerry looks ill today. c-jerry looks into the microscope. d-Jerry looks disdainfully at the pile of laundry.