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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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Hi A finite adverbial clause is a clause that functions as an adverb in a sentence and has a finite verb form in it. Let's use an finite adverbial of time as an example: Every time I see him I am really scared. (Every time I see him =
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1. Look the word up in the dictionary to find its meaning. 2. Check its part of speech. It it is a noun, you can use it as a subject or object; if it is a verb, you can use it as a simple predicate. If it is an adjective or adverb, you can use it
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1. Look the word up in the dictionary to find its meaning. 2. Check its part of speech. It it is a noun , you can use it as a subject or object; if it is a verb , you can use it as a simple predicate. If it is an adjective or adverb , you can use
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The predicate of a sentence is everything except the noun phrase acting as the Subject; it is the verb + objects + adverbs + complements.
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Hello, I need some help with this phrase. He is extremely helpless at maths. I've disected as follows: [is ] He = Nominal Group, functions as Subject. is extremely helpless at maths = predicate extremely helpless at maths = Adjectival
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Hello, We don't split verb phrases like "must have been sleeping" because the whole phrase is acting together as the verb. (But, in this example, you could choose to see "sleeping" as a gerund acting as the predicate noun
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
107 days ago
Dates, Clauses, Nouns, Adverbs, Gerunds, Predicates, Direct Objects, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Indirect, Objects, Languages
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When the windstorm hit, the lights went out. --> When the windstorm hit = subordinate adverbial clause --> the lights went out = independent clause /When the windstorm hit,/the lights/went out./ A S P /SC / S / P / So,
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Grammar Geek and AlpheccaStars, thanks for your replies sorry on the terminology, it comes from the Lexical Functional theory of grammar (LFG) LFG uses 'agent' and 'patient' as well as 'subject' and 'object' to
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