ready to play
"for bed"
This sentence has a single subject with compound predicate "prepare the soil and ready it for planting."
In that sentence, the word "primed" is the predicate (verb). (v) to make ready, prepare
No, It is a predicate.
The subject is usually who did the action, and the verb (predicate) is usually what the subject did. So, in the sentence "He ran to the pond": the subject is "he," and the action he took is "ran." Predicate rap time Are you ready? Here, let's go! A predicate is one of the two main parts of a sentence The other being the subject Which the predicate modifies For the simple sentence John [is yellow] John acts as the subject And is yellow acts as the predicate A subsequent description of the subject Headed with a verb. In current linguistic semantics A predicate is an expression That can be true of something Thus, the expressions "is yellow" Or "is like broccoli" Are true of those things That are yellow or like broccoli respectively This notion is closely related to the notion Of a predicate in formal logic Which includes more expressions Than the former one
No it does not. An example of a complete subject NOT in the beginning of a sentence could be: "In the morning, the black dog begged for his breakfast." Another: In the corner of the cage looking hungry ready to pounce crouched the wild tiger.
Yes, the download is complete and it's ready to use
A locker room.
We have already prepared the food so dinner is all ready to eat. I just used already and all ready in the same sentence. Already and all ready are both used in this sentence. This sentence includes the homonyms all ready and already.
The future tense verb for the sentence "The outline is ready" would be "will be." So the future tense sentence would be "The outline will be ready."
Ready,Steady,GO !
The future tense of the sentence "Are you ready to learn about verbs?" would be "Will you be ready to learn about verbs?"