The predicate is the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to it. A sentence may have more than one predicate.
The predicate answers what the subject is or what the subject does.
The answer to that question is the subject and the predicate.
This is not the kind of question we can answer.
No. If it's a question, it's simply not a sentence. A question and a sentence are different.
The complete subject is "The last essay question". The complete predicate is "was really challenging".
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.
The simple predicate is more commonly known as the verb.Every complete sentence contains two parts: a subject and a predicate. The subject is what (or whom) the sentence is about, while the predicate tells something about the subject. In the following sentences, the subject is in brackets and the predicate is highlighted:(The dog) barks.(The dog) chased the cat around the garden.(The board) discussed the upcoming merger.A predicate has at its centre a simple predicate, which is always the verb or verbs that link up with the subject. In the above examples, the simple predicates are "barks" "chased" and "discussed".
The predicate states what the subject does, is doing, or has done in a sentence.
There is no predicate adjective in that sentence.
No, in the sentence, "Where were you?", the pronoun "you" is not a predicate nominative.A predicate nominative (also called a subject complement) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verbthat restates or stands for the subject.The verb "were" in this sentence is not a linking verb. The pronoun "you" does not restate the word "where".An example of the pronoun "you" as a predicate nominative:"The winner is you." (winner = you).An example of the verb "were" as a linking verb:"Those birds were pigeons." (birds = pigeons)
A word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is a portion of a sentence which can consist of one or more words. "Am" is a verb. It is possible that when "am" is used in a sentence that "am" will be the predicate of the sentence, for example: "Are you the chosen one? I am."
Well.... a full sentence without being a run-on or a fragment needs to haveA subjectPredicateIndependant Clause (Optional... well if you have one in your sentence with a subject and a predicate it won't be a run-on)I hope I answered your question correctly!
supply a noun to function as the subject. or supply a verb to function as the predicate.