English, asked by ajitpisal55, 9 months ago

Divide the following sentence subject into predicate 1 The snake made a hissing noise ​

Answers

Answered by maheshkrish9906
2

Answer: Snake - subject ,made a hissing noise - predicate

Explanation:

Now understand by this :

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. Let’s take the same sentence from before: “The cat is sleeping in the sun.” The clause sleeping in the sun is the predicate; it’s dictating what the cat is doing. Cute!

How can you tell the difference?

One way to remember the difference between the two is that the subject will be a noun or pronoun. The predicate will contain a verb in addition to a possible modifier.

Test time

Let’s test our new skills! We’ll build a sentence and you guess the subject and predicate. Ready? Go!

“He reads.”

This is pretty simple, as there are only two words.

The subject is he, and the predicate is reads.

Can you still identify the subject and predicate with more words?

“He reads the book.”

The subject is still he, but the predicate has some extra words: reads the book. Since it’s still modifying the subject and contains a verb, it’s still serving the same function.

Are you ready to kick it up a notch?

“He reads the book in the park on Tuesdays.”

Can you guess the subject?

It’s still he!

The predicate is slightly more complicated: reads the book in the park on Tuesdays. Yup, all of it.

How about when the subject isn’t at the start of the sentence?

“Maria’s sisters are going to the pool.”

The subject in this sentence isn’t Maria, even though at first glance it seems like it is. This sentence is actually about Maria’s sisters; they are the subject. The predicate is are going to the pool because it shows what the sisters are doing.

DON'T FORGET TO MARK ME BRAINLIEST AND FOR MORE ANSWERS LIKE THIS FOLLOW ME .

Similar questions
English, 9 months ago