whats a complete predicate??

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Anonymous  #511470  Fri, 09 May 08 04:20 AM

what is a complete predicate, appositive, absolute, and a non clause??

  
Mister Micawber  #511483  Fri, 09 May 08 05:00 AM
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A complete predicate is all of the sentence except for the subject.

An appositive is 'an expression that has 'the same function and the same relation to other elements in the sentence [as a previous noun], the second expression identifying or supplementing the first. In Washington, our first president, the phrase our first president is in apposition with Washington.'

Absolute
(besides being a kind of vodka) probably refers to absolute construction, a phrasal structure somewhat like an appositive, in that it has no grammatical connection to the rest of the sentenceThe day being sunny, we decided to go on a picnic.

A non-clause  (not a term I am familiar with) appears to be any phrase or nonfinite clause that is not a finite clause.  I found these examples on the Web:

Clauses

Non-Clauses

.
I went home Going home
Because I went home Alone and depressed
She is pretty Becoming pretty
If she skips the appointment Skipping the appointment
The boy hit the ball Light weight and fluffy
While the parents cheered Cheering parents
She laughed The homework done
That he was wrong On the table
Who wore the hat Absent from class
Which we respected The president of the club
Where the boys found the missing glove One of the most admired members of the class
  
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