No, a predicate does not always contain a noun or a pronoun.
A predicate is the part of the sentences that is not the subject or its modifiers. A predicate is the verb and the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. A predicate may be just a verb.
Examples sentences containing a predicate with no nouns or pronouns:
A pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative is always a subject pronoun.It was she. (it = she)
A predicate adjective follows a linking verb. The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject, or the subject becomes the object. Some common linking verbs are seem, feel, and any form of be.Examples:I am sick.Bob feels sick.You seem sick.Barb got sick.In all the examples, sick is the predicate adjective.
A simple predicate is the main very that is in the predicate of a sentence. The simple predicate tells you what the subject is doing. An example is in the sentence My mom started the dryer, the word started is the simple predicate.
Easy
No, the correct form is "That person was I."In the sentence, the verb 'was' is functioning as a linking verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (Mary's feet got wet. feet->wet).The noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb is called a subject complement (a predicate nominative) which renames the subject.A pronoun that functions as a subject complement is always a subject (nominative) pronoun. The pronoun 'I' is a subject pronoun.
The appropriate pronoun is 'he'. In the sentence the pronoun he, takes the place of the noun 'teacher' as the subject complement following the linking verb 'will be'. A pronoun functioning as a subject complement (predicate nominative) is always a nominative (subjective) form.
The correct pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative is A he.A predicate nominative is a noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb to restate the subject of the sentence.A linking verb is a verb that acts as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object (this = he).A pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative is always the subjective form.
A subject in a sentence typically contains the noun or pronoun that performs the action of the verb. It is what the sentence is about.
The Simple Predicate of that sentence is hide. the verb of the sentence is always the simple predicate
A pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative is always a subject pronoun.It was she. (it = she)
Yes, a predicate nominative is the noun or pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.A pronoun functioning as a predicate nominative is always the subjective form.The pronoun "they" is a subjective personal pronoun.Example: The boys whose ball broke the window are they.
No, the noun "himself" is not a predicate noun. Predicate nouns rename the subject of a sentence and are typically used after a linking verb, such as "is" or "becomes." "Himself" is a reflexive pronoun used to refer back to the subject.
A predicate adjective follows a linking verb. The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject, or the subject becomes the object. Some common linking verbs are seem, feel, and any form of be.Examples:I am sick.Bob feels sick.You seem sick.Barb got sick.In all the examples, sick is the predicate adjective.
A simple predicate is the main very that is in the predicate of a sentence. The simple predicate tells you what the subject is doing. An example is in the sentence My mom started the dryer, the word started is the simple predicate.
The predicate nominative is a noun or pronoun that follows a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject. For example:Mary is my sister. (Mary = sister)Mary was elected class president. (Mary = president)The winner is you. (winner = you)I am the manager. (I = manager)You and I are friends. (You and I = friends)Amy was our teacher. (Amy = teacher)Harold is a baseball star. (Harold = Baseball star)It is I. (it = I)A pronoun functioning as a PREDICATE NOMINATIVE is always in the NOMINATIVE CASE.
The simple predicate is always a verb.The boy walks to schoolIn this sentence the simple predicate is walks. The complete predicate is walks to school
It is absent from this sentence. There is only a subjective case pronoun.