A predicate nominative is a noun or noun phrase that follows a linking verb and renames or identifies the subject of the sentence. It provides additional information about the subject and is usually connected to it through verbs such as "is," "are," "was," or "were." For example, in the sentence "She is a doctor," "doctor" serves as the predicate nominative, identifying what "she" is.
a predicate objective is a predicate that has an objective
Can is a modal verb. It is not a predicate or part of predicate until it is used in a sentence.I can see you - can see you = the predicate. can = simple predicate
There is no predicate. Why there is no predicate because the predicate is usually the verb then the rest of the sentence. so their is only an simple predicate which is move.
A simple predicate is a predicate containing a one word and a compound predicate contains a verb with two words
Predicate calculus is the axiomatic form of predicate logic.
Mountain is a predicate noun.
The KEY word in the predicate part of the sentence. It is not the WHOLE predicate. The simple predicate in a sentence is also known as the verb or verbs. The SIMPLE Predicate is not all the other words that are found in the predicate
The predicate states what the subject does, is doing, or has done in a sentence.
In this sentence, the simple predicate is "piles." The complete predicate is "piles of letters."
"unfolded" is the simple predicate. "unfolded a large quilt" is the complete predicate.
its a predicate
predicate