In the sentence "Who can tell what will happen tomorrow," the predicate is "can tell what will happen tomorrow." The predicate includes the verb "can tell" and describes the action or state of being related to the subject "who." It specifies what the subject is capable of doing regarding future events.
We cannot what WILL happen in the future, but the weather forecast will tell you if this is likely to happen.
Class is subject; begins is predicate
We can’t tell you the future. This is not the psychic network.
I am buying the book tomorrow so I can tell you in a couple of days!
jiah will say sorry to nikita
The duration of It Could Happen Tomorrow is 1800.0 seconds.
Tomorrow. And I don't mean December 3rd. I mean tomorrow. When you wake up tomorrow, it will still be tomorrow. Get it? It will never happen, but people will be predicting it forever.
In the subject, tell who or what the sentence is about. In the predicate, tell something about the subject. Example: Jimmy broke his hand. The subject would be Jimmy because it is who the sentence is about. The predicate would be broke because that is what Jimmy did to his hand. Tip; a predicate is usually a verb
It Could Happen Tomorrow was created on 2006-01-15.
The statement "He or she could tell you" has a compound subject - there are two nouns preceding the verb. A compound predicate would be "He could tell you about airplanes or about trains."
it tells what the subject is doing
It is possible but it usually doesn't happen