English, asked by sumitm114, 2 months ago

6. None could do it.
subject and predicate​

Answers

Answered by achus33
0

Within a sentence, the subject is the noun (or pronoun ) that performs the action. Within a sentence, the predicate is the verb or verb phrase that tells what action is being performed by the subject. ... A phrase is a group of words that does not contain both a subject and a verb. Sentences are made up of clauses.predicates always follow the subject?

Word Order: Most of the time, the subject comes before the predicate. However, sometimes the subject can come after part of the predicate. This can happen when the sentence is a question.The subject of the sentence is what (or whom) the sentence is about. In the sentence “The cat is sleeping in the sun,” the word cat is the subject. A predicate is the part of a sentence, or a clause, that tells what the subject is doing or what the subject is.Every complete sentence contains two parts: a subject and a predicate. The subject is what (or whom) the sentence is about, while the predicate tells something about the subject.

Similar questions