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Sentence Parts_2 

What is a SENTENCE?  A sentence is a group of words that express a complete thought or idea.  A sentence always begins with a CAPITAL letter and ends with a Period ( . ), a Question mark ( ? ) or an Exclamation point ( ! ).

Every sentence has two main parts: a SUBJECT, and a PREDICATE.

 

SUBJECTS

PREDICATES

I

He

fell.

is lazy.

The boy

Those dogs

kicked the ball.

chased the mailman away.

All the women

Six white horses and four black ones

went to the store and bought new gloves.

pulled the carts into town and around the square.

By looking at the examples above, can you tell what a Subject and a Predicate are?

Subject:   Who or what a sentence is about; who or what does something in a sentence; any words that tell about  or describe the main subject.

Predicate:   What happens in a sentence; who or what it happens to; words that tell when, where, why or how the action happens; words that describe  who or what  the action happens to.

NOTE: There are words called Linking Verbs that are always part of the Predicate but  do not show any action.  The most common ones are AM, IS, ARE, WAS, WERE, BE, BEING, BEEN.  They tell about the existence of something or someone, not what  someone or  something does.  They are called Linking Verbs because they link the subject to a word or words in the predicate that mean the same as the subject or that describe the subject. 

What are Subjects made of?

Articles

Adjectives

Nouns

Pronouns

Prepositional Phrases

a, an

large, small, tiny

man, boy, woman

I, you, we

of the family

the

green, yellow, blue

horse, dog, cat

he, she, it

in the choir

 

old, young, ancient

building, tree, road

they

with a long beard

 

this, that, these, those

truck, car, bicycle

who, which, what

from the office staff

 

one, five, twenty

happiness, sadness

this, that, these, those

on the corner

 

naked, wealthy, tired

freedom, slavery

one, anyone, nobody

without a spare tire

Articles:  Point out nouns; signal that a noun is close ahead in a sentence.  Nouns can be used without an article, but articles can never be used without a noun.

Adjectives: Describe nouns.  They tell what kind, which one, how many, what size, what color a noun is

Nouns:  Any word that names something is a noun.  The name of a person, a place, a thing, an idea, an emotion, or an activity is a noun.  If it is a particular person, place or thing (George, New York, Cadillac), it is a Proper Noun and must be written with a capital letter.  If it is a general name (man, city, automobile), it is a common noun with no capital letter.

Pronouns:  Pronouns take the place of nouns when we write or speak. (Tom did not come to work today.  He was sick.)

Prepositional Phrases:  These small groups of words tell us which one or what kind the sentence is referring to.  (The building on the corner is tall.  Which building?  Not the one across the street or the one in the middle of the block, but the one "on the corner".)

Not all of these parts need to be in a subject, but all of them may be.  This is how, using parts from the box above... (predicates will be in parentheses ).

  • He (was sick.)
  • The man (was sick.)
  • The wealthy old man (was sick.)
  • That ancient yellow truck without a spare tire (drove down the street.)
  • The great sadness of the large family in the choir (depressed me.)

What are Predicates made of?

Verbs

Adverbs

Art.

Adjectives

Nouns

Pronouns

Prep. Phrases

am, is, are

very, hardly

a

this, that

girl, boy, dog

me, you

in the back seat

was, were

quickly, slowly

an

these, those

river, car, fog

him, her

under the pine tree

go, went, come

now, then, here, there

the

one, five, many, few, several

concert, movie, play

us, them

between the pages, on the roof

run, jump, hide

where, everywhere

 

big, little, old, young, pretty

running, singing, day

anyone, someone

after the party, before dinner

like, have, take

when, until

 

blue, red, dirty, clean, disgusting

pity, cheer, deer

nobody, everybody

during the class, with difficulty

 

Verbs:   Words that describe or name an action; words that describe a state of being or existence.  Every predicate must have a verb.  Verbs also tell us when something happens or exists - in the past, the present or the future.

Adverbs:   Adverbs modify (add to the meaning of) verbs.  They describe when, where, why or how something happens.  Adverbs can also modify adjectives and other adverbs.

Pronouns:   Different  pronouns are used in the predicate than are used in the subject. Subject Pronouns do it and  Predicate Pronouns  receive it.  ( They gave the balls to them He showed the book to him .) 

Examples of Predicates.   (Subjects are in parentheses ).

  • (I) am sad.
  • He) walked.
  • (He) slowly walked home.
  • (She) threw the ball.
  • (She) quickly threw the ball to her teammate
  • Before halftime, (she) quickly threw the ball to her teammate.

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