What is needed to make a complete sentence?
A subject is the main noun or pronoun in a sentence. A predicate is the action (verb) or description of the subject. Together, they make a complete sentence!
Subjects and Predicates: What We Need to Know
Subject: the person, place, thing, or idea that is being discussed or described in a sentence. Predicate: the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject. Subject-predicate Relationship: the relationship between the subject and predicate of a sentence, which can be a linking relationship (the subject 'is' the predicate) or an action relationship (the subject 'does' the predicate).
Concepts:
The subject of a sentence is the noun or pronoun that the sentence is about, while the predicate is the part of the sentence that contains the verb and describes the action of the subject. The predicate can also contain words that modify the verb, such as adverbs or adjectives. In some sentences, the subject can be implied, rather than stated, and the predicate can contain the subject and the verb.
Did you know?
What is the most important part of a sentence?
- Subject
- Predicate
- Both are equally important
What are the 2 parts of a sentence?
Connect the subject to the correct predicate
Name the two essential parts of a sentence?
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What difference can you identify between a subject and a predicate? Answer in complete sentences.