Aussie girl suggested that there may be someone here who can answer the title question. It was mentioned in one of the level two suggestion articles.
Aussie girl suggested that there may be someone here who can answer the title question. It was mentioned in one of the level two suggestion articles.
Every complete sentence contains two parts: a subject and a predicate. The subject is what (or whom) the sentence is about, while the predicate tells something about the subject.
A compound predicate is a predicate that includes more than one verb pertaining to the same subject.
An example is: Her Mistress and she walked slowly through the play party and admired the many punishments exhibited around the house.
Walked and admired being the verbs.
Thank you kindly. Grammer class is starting to come back to me now![]()
Don't feel bad, ladychipmunk. I have a degree in English lit and my nine year old daughter had to remind me what a compound predicate was the other day. ;-)
A "Compound Predicate"! Is that something like ending with a participle???
"Too late for sweets, too soon for flowers"
ibid. O.LeVant
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