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Subjects, predicates

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Page 1: Grammar

Subjects, predicates

Page 2: Grammar

A Subject

tells who or what the sentence is about.

Spider Man battles for justice.

Who battles for justice? The subject

Page 3: Grammar

The predicate tells wass’ up with the subject.

• The predicate tells what the subject does or has.

• The predicate can also describe what the

subject is or is like.

Page 4: Grammar

A sentence must have a subject and a predicate

and

express a complete thought.

(make sense)

Page 5: Grammar

The Complete Subject

Spider Man with his red cover-alls, mask, spinneret's, and green eyes was a fierce fighter.

The complete subject includes all of the words in the subject of the sentence.

Page 6: Grammar

The Complete Predicate

Spider Man with his red cover-alls, mask, spinneret's, and green eyes was a fierce fighter.

The complete predicate includes all of the words in the predicate of a sentence.

Page 7: Grammar

The Simple Subject

is the main word or group of words in the complete subject.

is usually a noun or pronoun.Spider Man in his mask

and cover-alls is a hero.

Page 8: Grammar

The Simple Predicate

is the main word or group of words in the complete predicate.

is always a verb.

Spider Man in his mask and cover-alls ran toward the robbers.

Page 9: Grammar

Finding Subjects

Declarative Sentences Most statements begin with the subject.

I am Rocky.

I am so cool.

This dog is mine.

Page 10: Grammar

Interrogative Sentence Order

Questions may begin with part or all of the predicate. The subject come next followed by the rest of the predicate.Have you seen a

dog?

Have I seen a dog?

Why do you ask?

Page 11: Grammar

Interrogative Sentences

When questions begin with part or all of the predicate, this is the P S P word order.

Have you seen a dog? P S P

Have I seen a dog? P S P

Why do you ask? P S P

Page 12: Grammar

To locate the subject of an interrogative

sentence,change the question into a declarative

sentence. (Make a statement.)Have you seen a dog?

QuestionYou have seen a dog. Statement

Have I seen a dog? Question

I have seen a dog. Statement

Why do you ask? Question You do ask why.

Statement

Page 13: Grammar

Sometimes sentences have inverted word order.

Most sentences have the subject at the beginning of the sentence and the predicate after the subject.

This is the S P sentence order

This is the P S sentence order.

Page 14: Grammar

Imperative SentenceIn requests and commands, the subject is usually not stated. The word you is understood to be the subject.

Catch that cat!

You

Page 15: Grammar

Compound Subjects (2 or+ subjects)

Compound Predicates (2 or+ verbs)

The cat and the dog are not buddies.

The cat hissed and spat.

The dog growled and barked.

Page 16: Grammar

Compound subjects and predicates (verbs)

Use and, but, or or to join the compound subjects and predicates.

When you have 3 or more subjects or 3 or more verbs: and, but, or or usually comes before only the last subject or predicate.

Page 17: Grammar

Wild Cat, Cool Dude, and Izzy

rule the Bumble’s house.

Page 18: Grammar

Wild Cat, Cool Dude, and Izzy

stalk, bite, and scratch the poor Bumbles!

Page 19: Grammar

Simple and CompoundSentences

You can put two simple sentences together and

make a compound sentence. WOW!

Page 20: Grammar

Wild Cat, Cool Dude, and Izzy are in a cat conspiracy,

butthe Bumbles don’t know it.