looks for butterfiles
The largest family of butterflies is the Nymphalidae.
Relaxing
A predicate adjective is a term for an adjective that comes after a linking verb rather than before a noun. Out of these choices, the sentence, "Jerry looks ill today," uses a predicate adjective.
looks at butterflies :)
Disdainfully is the predicate adjective. The adjective describes how Jerry looks at the pile of laundry and who can blame him.
In the sentence "My family makes a camp," the predicate is "makes a camp." It tells us what the subject, "My family," is doing. The predicate includes the verb "makes" and the object "a camp," providing information about the action and what is being created.
The sentence "Jerry looks into the map" does not contain a predicate adjective. A predicate adjective is a word describing the subject that comes after a linking verb. An example is "Jerry looks confused," where confused is the predicate adjective.
ill
Simple subject: family Simple predicate: went
Oh, dude, the simple subject is "He" and the simple predicate is "loves." The complete subject is "He loves to send emails to his family and friends" and the complete predicate is "now." So, like, there you have it.
The predicate noun is pet.A predicate is the verb and all of the words that follow that are related to that verb (in other words, all the words that are not the subject or subject phrase). A sentence may have more than one verb or predicate.In the example sentence the predicate is 'is your family pet'.
The complete predicate of this sentence is 'fascinate people'.