The sky is blue find the subject and predicet.
Answers
Answered by
3
For example, the sentences "The car Tom is driving is blue", "The sky is blue", and "The cover of this book is blue" come from the template "is blue" by placing an appropriate noun/noun phrase in front of it. The phrase "is blue" is a predicate and it describes the property of being blue.
Answered by
1
Answer:
In the given sentence, the Subject- The sky and Predicate- is blue.
Explanation:
- Any complete sentence in the English language comprises two parts namely, Subject and Predicate.
- Subject: A subject in a sentence is any object (noun) i.e. what or whom the sentence speaks about.
- The "subject" of the sentence is the noun that demonstrates what (or whom) the sentence is about.
- Predicate: A predicate in a sentence tells about the subject (What action is being performed by the subject).
- A predicate is an action word state format that depicts a property of items, or a relationship among objects addressed by the factors.
- It is a piece of a sentence or a statement, that exhibits the very thing that the subject is doing or what's going on with the subject.
The difference between a subject and a predicate:
- The difference between these two is that the subject will always be a noun or pronoun.
- The predicate will carry the verb in addition to a possible modifier.
- For example, the given sentence "The sky is blue", is a declarative sentence which conveys a complete, meaningful sentence.
- The phrase "is blue" is a predicate that expresses the property of the sky being blue.
Thus, the subject here is "the sky" and the predicate with the helping verb i.e. "is blue".
#SPJ3
Similar questions
Chemistry,
3 months ago
Social Sciences,
3 months ago
Math,
6 months ago
English,
11 months ago
Math,
11 months ago