Complete Predicate And Simple Predicate. A Predicate can either be a simple predicate or a complete predicate. Complete predicates are all the words in a sentence that are not part of the complete subject.
A predicate may also include additional modifiers with the verb that tell what the subject does. A simple predicate is an action word that tells something about the subject. A complete predicate is made up of a verb or verb phrase along with its objects, complements, and/or adverbial modifiers.
The adjective that follows a linking verb usually tells us something about the.
There are simple predicates, compound predicates, and complete predicates.
A complete predicate consists of the verb and all accompanying modifiers. A sentence with simple subject and predicate: The dog barks. What is the difference between a complex subject and a simple subject?