No. The predicate of the sentence is objective and, therefore, the correct pronoun would be 'me'.
The predicate adjective in this sentence would be careful.
A complete sentence has a subject and a predicate, the subject is this case would be the person who attended Yale which is missing so the sentence isn't really complete its more in point form.
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
Stop is a verb, and as a word by itself is not a predicate. A predicate is part of a sentence that makes a statement about a/the subject. In this case if 'stop' was part of a full clause then it would be the simple predicate. However, the predicate is anything that makes a statement about the subject of a sentence.
There is not a predicate noun in this sentence. The definition of a predicate noun is that it defines or restates the subject AND it has to follow a linking verb. example:Mrs.Smith is a nurse. the predicate noun would be nurse
The complete predicate is the full verb and all its modifiers. In the sentence, the complete predicate is "would start soon".
yes, it has a subject and a predicate
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)
This is an example of a sentence. Happyhot970: A example sentence would have a verb, subject, predicate, and maybe also a noun.
"She is a paragon of reading." is a sentence, yes. You will notice that it has a subject ("she") and a predicate ("is a paragon of reading")
Yes but it's the way you diagram. ex.) Ducks quack. that is a simple subject=ducks simple predicate=quack but if you have= The teacher gave us homework. Teacher would be the subject or the complete subject would be, The teacher. the simple predicate would be, gave. the complete predicate would be, gave us homework. (i had a really good grammar teacher this year!)