In the sentence "Your feet are tired", the simple subject is "feet": Note that "feet" is the only noun in the sentence, and the only pronoun, "your", is in its possessive case, not suitable for a sentence subject.
tornado's shape (simple subject) is ( simple predicate)
For a verb to be a linking verb, the direct object of the verb will be another word for or another form of the subject of the verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign; 'Mary is my sister.' (Mary=sister); or 'Mary's feet got wet.' (feet->wet). Examples: The teacher appeared tired. (teacher=tired) The teacher appeared in the doorway. (not a linking verb)
Yes, the word tired can be a predicate nominative when it 'renames' the subject. Predicate nominatives follow a 'linking' verb. Examples: Mary is tired. (Mary = tired) Mary became tired. (Mary > tired) They were tired. (They = tired) When used with a non-linking verb, tired is not a predicate nominative. Examples: That dog is a tired old thing. (tired is an adjective modifying the object or the sentence) The tired kids were ready for a nap. (tired is an adjective modifying the subject of the sentence)
simple subject is shape and simple predicate is "is" i think.
weather = simple subject dry = simple predicate
"The tired woman" is the complete subject; however, "The tired woman falls asleep listening" is not a complete sentence.
Tired Feet - 1933 was released on: USA: 1 January 1933
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
The best nursing clogs to wear for tired feet are clogs that allow your feet to stay in a high acrhed position. This allows your feet to stop making contact with the ground.
A simple subject is a thing. If it were talking about a Baseball or a sentence the baseball is the simple subject.
Simple Subject= You Simple predicate= waited
elevation and massaging
Yes, the simple subject is "wallet."
a simple predicate is a verb and simple subject is a noun
Class is the simple subject. Did have is the simple predicate (verb).
How about wired talkers. Beat Feet!
Subject: Few people Predicate: had them