No, "friendly" is an adjective describing a characteristic or quality of a subject in a sentence. It is not a predicate object, which typically refers to the noun or pronoun that receives the action of the verb in a sentence.
Yes, in traditional sentence diagramming, direct object predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives are placed on the right side of the main line. Direct object predicate nominatives follow the direct object, while predicate adjectives follow the linking verb on the right side of the main line.
"visits her grandparents" is the predicate. It includes the verb "visits" and its object "her grandparents."
"Completely desperate" is a predicate adjective here describing the situation.
A predicate nominative renames the subject of a sentence, while a predicate adjective describes the subject. Predicate nominatives: "He is a doctor." (doctor renames he) Predicate adjectives: "She is happy." (happy describes she) An object of a preposition is a noun that follows a preposition in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "She went to the store," "store" is the object of the preposition "to" because it is the noun that relates to the preposition by showing the destination.
In grammar, an object is a noun or noun phrase that receives the action of the verb, while a predicate is the part of a sentence that contains the verb and provides information about the subject. Objects typically come after the verb, while the predicate includes the verb along with any accompanying words that describe the action or state of being.
Subject predicate.
indirect
Yes, in traditional sentence diagramming, direct object predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives are placed on the right side of the main line. Direct object predicate nominatives follow the direct object, while predicate adjectives follow the linking verb on the right side of the main line.
subject,object,direct object,indirect object/object of the prepositionand predicate :) a little song for my mom ilove you mother my mother my mother that reads
Yes it can be a simple predicate if it is not followed by direct object, adjective predicate nominative or adverb.
indirect object
They answer the questions "How" or "what" :)
"Showed" is the predicate (verb). sign = subject us = indirect object trail = direct object
Direct objects receive the action of the verb.Carl built a house. (a house is the direct object)Indirect objects receive the direct object.Martha handed me her hat. (her hat is the direct object; me is the indirect object)Predicate nominatives and predicate adjectives follow a linking verb and rename or describe the subject.Carl is a carpenter. (a carpenter is the predicate nominative)Martha is happy. (happy is the predicate adjective)
A predicate is part of a sentence.The dog chased the fat cat. The dog is the subject everything else is called the predicate, (verb and object).
"visits her grandparents" is the predicate. It includes the verb "visits" and its object "her grandparents."
No, not all predicates contain nouns. A predicate is a verb and all the words that follow that relate to that verb. A direct or an indirect object of a verb can be a noun, a pronoun, or an adjective. A verb may have no object all, the predicate can be just the verb. Examples (complete predicate in italics):No object: Yes, I can imagine.Noun object: I did have lunch.Pronoun object: I will call you.Adjective object: Your sweater looks warm.