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Hi
The simple answer is yes, but there’s more to it than that. The verb ‘stay’ is a linking verb (aka a copular verb). What it links here is the subject (‘the paint’) with the entire sequence ’looking good for many years’ , which although
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It is predicative, since it is in the predicate of the sentence, i.e. it follows the verb.
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In the sentence 'the paint stays looking good for many years', is the participial phrase 'looking good' a predicate adjective, or is it just a regular adjective?
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subject,direct object,indirect object,predicate nominative,objcet of a preposition,direct address,appositive,or an abjective complement.
These terms describe the functions that words take when used in sentences . They are not properties of
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Hi Avangi Also depending/ dependent upon the weather would be the farmers and the construction workers. I think it's worth mentioning that in your sentence, I don't see a phrase that means "contingent on". In addition, that
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Not really my cup of tea. The semicolon puzzles me greatly. (I suppose it separates the two direct objects.) I see only one main clause: home has setting and descent . The only other thing I'd call a clause is "that seems appropriately
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1 The kitchen is the place I like to have the cleanest at all times. Since I moved out and have been living on my own, cleanliness has been a big part of my everyday life , as opposed to when I lived with a roommate and didn't care how the
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Yes to the first one. For the second one, a compound predicate means the subject did two things. Which sentence has the subject doing two things?
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I think the answer is adjective
The part of speech that answers the question “which one” is a/an
A. preposition
B. conjunction.
C. adjective.
D. adverb.
I am pretty sure the answers A
Which of the
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When you use worthy as a predicate adjective, you have to introduce its complement with of . So the x.2 versions are both wrong. 1.1 says you are good enough to have a knight! (What will you have him do for you? Some jousting perhaps? ) 2.1 says
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