English, asked by mahe3675, 1 year ago

The cackling of geese saved rome what is the subject and what is the predicate in this sentence

Answers

Answered by Raju2392
22

Answer:

Both subject and predicate can be formed from several words. In this case we have a subject the cackling of geese and a predicate saved Rome. But in some modern grammars, the sentence is divided into a function and arguments, also called predicate and arguments, or verb and objects. ... The cackling of geese saves Rome.

Answered by orangesquirrel
6

In the given sentence, 'The cackling of geese' is the subject and 'saved Rome' is the predicate.

 

* Any complete sentence should have two parts: a subject and a predicate.

* A subject refers to a person or an object who is associated with an action.

It mostly contains the noun or the pronoun.

* A predicate is the other half of the sentence that describes the action being performed by the subject.

It mostly contains the verb.

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