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The sentence is made up of two basic parts: the subject and the predi- cate. The predicate may be simple or it may be extremely complicated.

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Presentation on theme: "The sentence is made up of two basic parts: the subject and the predi- cate. The predicate may be simple or it may be extremely complicated."— Presentation transcript:

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3 The sentence is made up of two basic parts: the subject and the predi- cate. The predicate may be simple or it may be extremely complicated.

4 The subject of a sentence is the main noun, the noun doing the action. Every sentence has a subject, although sometimes the subject is implied. To

5 find the subject of a sen- tence, first find the main verb. Then ask yourself, “Who or what is doing this action?” More often, the subject comes first in

6 a sentence, and putting the subject first is probably the more straightforward way to organize a sentence. But for variety, and even for

7 suspense, writers can choose to reverse the order, putting the predicate first and the subject last, or putting parts of the predicate on

8 either side of the sub-ject. The foolproof way to find the subject is first to locate the verb and then to ask yourself who or what is doing this action?

9 My dog has three legs, two of which are wooden, and the other made of pure gold.

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11 My uvula is very sore for some unknown reason. Ask Yourself: “What is” Answer: “uvula”

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13 Those socks have been under the bed for three weeks. (To find the subject ask yourself, “What has been?”) Answer: the “socks”

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15 The subject and verb must agree in number. This means that a singular subject takes a singular verb, and a plural subject takes a plural verb. You don’t have to distinguish singular verbs from plural verbs; you have to distin- guish between singular and plural

16 subjects. Get it? Because if you can determine whether a subject is singular or plural, your ear will match it with the correct verb. (Trust me!) If your subject is singular, match the verb with it; if your subject is plural, use they.

17 Choose the Correct Subject & Verb The danger of eating too many chips (do, does) not worry her.


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