A subject is a noun (including gerunds and infinitives) or pronoun, so it represents a person, place, thing, concept or situation. A predicate is a verb, so it represents an action or a state of being.
The subject is "name" and the predicate is "is".
SUBJECT and PREDICATE EXAMPLES: 1: the girl in the prom wore a white satin gown. \ / SUBJECT Predicate 2: Anna ate apple / \ SUBJECT Predicate 3: Limwell Loves the outdoors. / \ SUBJECT Predicate 4: Jessica Gave Alpha a Hug / \ SUBJECT Predicate 5: We all want piece. / \ SUBJECT predicate
To determine if the subject complement is a predicate nominative or predicate adjective, you need to analyze the function it serves in the sentence. A predicate nominative renames or identifies the subject, while a predicate adjective describes or modifies the subject. Look at the verb in the sentence - if it is a linking verb (such as "is," "was," "seems"), the subject complement is likely a predicate nominative. If the verb is an action verb, the subject complement is likely a predicate adjective.
Every complete sentence has two parts, a subject and a predicate. The subject is the part of the sentence that tells who the sentence is about and the predicate tells what the subject is doing.
Simple Subject= You Simple predicate= waited
The subject is "name" and the predicate is "is".
SUBJECT and PREDICATE EXAMPLES: 1: the girl in the prom wore a white satin gown. \ / SUBJECT Predicate 2: Anna ate apple / \ SUBJECT Predicate 3: Limwell Loves the outdoors. / \ SUBJECT Predicate 4: Jessica Gave Alpha a Hug / \ SUBJECT Predicate 5: We all want piece. / \ SUBJECT predicate
Pedro is awesome :D he has spikey hair. An example of the use of a predicate subject would be... Awesome is Pedro. (We know that 'awesome' is not the subject because it's an adjective.)
you is subject thank is predicate
The predicate states what the subject does, is doing, or has done in a sentence.
A subject and a predicate.
James likes reading. subject = James, predicate = likes We left our lunch at home. -- subject = we, predicate = left The doctor examined the patient -- subject = doctor predicate = examined He stole my book . -- subject = He predicate = stole The man is a monster -- subject = man predicate = is
To determine if the subject complement is a predicate nominative or predicate adjective, you need to analyze the function it serves in the sentence. A predicate nominative renames or identifies the subject, while a predicate adjective describes or modifies the subject. Look at the verb in the sentence - if it is a linking verb (such as "is," "was," "seems"), the subject complement is likely a predicate nominative. If the verb is an action verb, the subject complement is likely a predicate adjective.
A subject complement is the predicate adjective or predicate noun that follows a linking verb to rename or describe the subject.
Simple sentences are comprised of a subject and a predicate. The predicate states what the subject is, has, or does.
Every complete sentence has two parts, a subject and a predicate. The subject is the part of the sentence that tells who the sentence is about and the predicate tells what the subject is doing.
example of sentence complete subject and complete predicate Listening=subject is not=complete predicate