When you try and make the other sentence blush.
A sentence complement is a word or phrase that follows a linking verb and provides additional information about the subject. It can be a noun, pronoun, adjective, or adverb that completes the meaning of the linking verb. Sentence complements can be either predicate nominatives or predicate adjectives.
His work contains a rife amount of errors that need correction.
This is a passive sentence. Passive sentences have a verb phrase -be + past participleThe verb phrase for this sentence is were converted
'Shepherds' is the subject while 'Jesus' is the direct object.
Every Saturday, our family observes the sabbath by refraining from work, spending time together, and resting.
The ancient temple was built on top of a ziggurat, a massive stepped structure that towered over the city.
I was awed by the full complement of nurses that suddenly appeared.
objective complement
speech
Yes, a sentence with a linking verb will often have a subject complement. The subject complement renames or describes the subject and is connected to it by the linking verb.
There is no subject complement in that sentence. A subject complement is a noun, pronoun, or adjective that follows a linking verb. Left is the verb, and it's transitive, not linking.
predicate adjectives
In the sentence 'The pizza Marcus made you was delicious,' the type of complement 'you' is is called a direct object.
obj. complement
A sentence may have no complement at all.A complement is a noun (or adjective) that follows a linking verb and renames the subject, a subject complement.When the noun (or adjective) follows the direct object and it tells what the direct object has become, it is the object complement.If you are not using a linking verb and you are not describing the object of the verb, the sentence has no complement.
the play
Complement - to complete Sentence: The new study complements the previous report. Compliment - to flatter or praise Sentence: His employer complimented him on his achievement.
him= direct object president= objective complement